June Jobs

General:

  • Keep deadheading roses to keep the display going for as long as possible.

  • Prune late spring flowering shrubs such as weigela, deutzia and mock orange towards the end of June, once they've finished flowering.

  • Continue weeding and deadheading to keep the garden looking it's best.

  • Bedding plants and annuals can be planted out now that the risk of frost has passed.

  • Containers will need to be watered daily in dry spells, and fed weekly with a high potash feed such as tomato food.

  • Plant gladioli to fill any gaps once alliums have finished flowering.

  • Pick sweet peas regularly to keep the display going.


Fruit & Vegetables:

  • Hoe off annual weeds in the veg patch early on a sunny morning - they will dry up and wilt and can be removed later in the day.

  • Pinch out sideshoots on cordon grown varieties of tomatoes. Bush varieties don't need to be pinched out.

  • Peg down runners on strawberry plants if you want more plants for future years or remove them from the parent plant if you prefer.

  • Transport vegetable seedlings to their growing positions.

  • Water crops regularly in dry weather.

  • Harvest early potato varieties, spring onions, salad leaves, baby leeks, early varieties of carrots, radishes and summer-sprouting varieties of broccoli.


Wildlife:

  • Take a stroll around the garden with your morning cuppa, observing the wildlife going about its business, and listening to the birds and the bees enjoying the beginning of summer.

  • If you find a hedgehog nest in your garden, don't disturb it as the mother may abandon her young.

  • Ladybirds are great predators and deserve to be encouraged. Leave a patch of stinging nettles in a corner of the garden to encourage aphids for the ladybirds to feed on.

  • Herbs take the accolade for optimum wildlife value due to their insect attracting properties. Some of the best include mint, lavender, rosemary, thyme and marjoram.

Gwennan Rees