February
Gardening Tips of the Month
by Rich
Sherman, Myrtle Creek Nursery
February is the perfect time to prepare your soil for
spring planting and to prune shrubs and trees. Even though
the weather may be warming, don't forget the possibility
of a sudden freeze, so continue to protect your
plants.
Flowers
& Vegetables: Time to prepare vegetable and flower
beds for spring gardens by using lots of organic matter
like compost, peat,
aged manure, or cottonseed meal. Water your garden beds
thoroughly to make digging up easier, wait a day for the
water to drain, then add a 4-5 6 inch layer of organic
matter into the top 12 inches of garden soil. This is a
good time to mix in a phosphorous fertilizer.
You can sow seeds for beans, beets, carrots, swiss chard,
leaf lettuce, onions, potatoes, radishes, spinach, and set
out transplants of peppers and tomatoes in most areas,
after 20th of February.
Trees and shrubs: February is fertilizing time for
fruit, nut, shade trees and shrubs and vines. Prune only
to shape and control growth and only prune off frost
damaged portions after new growth as started. You can
plant container-grown shrubs and trees in most parts of
the southwest and you can transplant bare root deciduous
fruit trees. Don't forget to
water large trees such as
pine, sycamore, cottonwood, and mesquite by slowly soaking
the area under the tree branches.
Roses: If you haven't already, it's time to clean
out dead or diseased wood in roses and remove weak and
crossing canes and old leaves to discourage insects and
disease. Bare-root roses should be put in the ground
this month, the earlier the better. Use plenty of organic
material mixed with soil to give your roses a good start.
Fertilize established roses with granular fertilizers
about the middle of the month, but water the day before
and after each application.
Lawns: Ryegrass should be watered about once or
twice a week depending on the weather, while Bermuda grass
just needs water about once a month. Bermuda will begin to
turn green when nighttime lows climb to 65 degrees. Keep
rye grass lawns mowed to 1 1/2 inches before watering. Do
not water lawns during the night or mow the lawn when the
grass is wet.



