November and December Stepping Stones


The first freeze of the fall may have already occurred, or not. Regardless, temperatures are much cooler as the daylight shortens. You will notice some flowers continue to bloom even after the first frost, unless it was quite severe.

The garden and landscape falls outwardly into a state of rest and recuperation. These two months provide rest, a refreshing and a renewal of spirit and enthusiasm for the gardener as the holiday season takes precedence.

Plan and Design

Bare of most foliage, the winter landscape offers to us the opportunity of evaluating the structural merits of the landscape. With the passing of the seasons colorful fanfare, we are able to better see areas within the garden framework that require improvement. Is our garden one dimensional, a flat plane of annuals with little structural interest? Is there a framework from which to build plant compositions or communities that provide not only a plant ecology in harmony with nature, but also visual interest? At the same time you consider the structure of the garden, evaluate your landscape for winter plant interest.

Adding rocks or boulders, shrubs and trees can make simple improvements to visual interest and habitats. Paths, walls, arbors, pergolas, lattices, statuary, benches are some of the more common hardscape features that provide bones for the garden structure. The intrusion of adding structural elements to the landscape into and around beds and borders is less damaging after plants have gone to ground.

During the season of giving, put a garden feature on your wish list. Statuary, benches, containers, sculpture, garden tools, equipment and books will be appreciated by most of your gardener friends and family.

Amend the Soil

You can still begin to prepare spring beds in early November using the smothering or lasagna method. Regardless of the method, beginning your bed preparation in the fall allows for the soil food web to begin activation months ahead of planting.

Turf

Avoid the spring rush; the end of the mowing season is a great time to sharpen the blades on the lawn mower and provide routine maintenance on your power tools.

Appropriate Plants

November and December are excellent months to plant trees and shrubs.

Plant spring bulbs before January. November is my month of choice out of preference, not necessity. After the excesses of Thanksgiving dinner, I enjoy a few hours in the garden, even if the weather is bracing. Planting anytime between October and December 31st, should yield good results. Late winter or early spring blooming bulbs may experience delayed bloom the first year if planted in late December or later.

If you’ve dug up Amaryllis bulbs to force blooms, remember to rescue them from darkness. After about 8 weeks, pot them, and keep lightly moist in a bright, sunny inside location, above 55º. They will begin to re-bloom during the holiday season. (Garden Design Magazine, Dec. 2000-Jan. 2001).

Dig up any non-cold hardy bulbs to store indoors if you haven’t already.

Efficient Use of Water

Remember to water through out the winter. ET rates are greatly lessened; adjust your watering accordingly. Especially, do not neglect watering fall planted trees and shrubs.

Continue to water the winter annuals you planted (pansies, ornamental cabbage, etc.) on a regular basis.

Perform fall maintenance on drip and other irrigation systems. Flush out the lines and clean the filters. Drain hoses for winter. Disconnect shut off valves and timers to avoid breakage due to freezing. Check piping for holes and cuts.

Mulch

Finish any fall tasks of mulch replenishment. Add additional mulch or cut evergreen boughs to place over your Zone 7 (and higher) plants you are testing for cold hardiness.

Maintenance

  • Harvest the fallen leaves. Continue to mulch-mow or bag and use them either now or later after composting. Use them in your landscape; you are returning to the soil what the plants and trees have used. The perfect recycle.
  • Weed when necessary. The winter weeds have germinated and are growing. Take them out when they’re young.
  • Clean up, oil and /or sharpen you garden tools and equipment and store them safely in a shed or garage.
  • Clean out your containers that housed annuals or non-cold hardy perennials. Dump old container soil mixtures into the compost pile and start fresh in the spring. Clean out the pots and store in the shed or garage.
  • Clean out the shed.
  • When damaging weather occurs such as heavy wet snowfalls or ice storms, prune broken branches as soon as possible; do not wait until spring. Prune down to a joint, do not make stub or flush cuts. During heavy snowfalls, tap the accumulated snow from the limbs as the snow continues to fall to avoid damage. Evergreens are particularly susceptible to contortion by moist snowfalls.

Extra’s

Choose a calcium chloride de-icer (instead of a sodium based de-icer) for those snowy, icy driveways and sidewalks. Use only in the recommended manner to minimize residue in your lawn and gardens.

Don’t neglect our feathered friends, if you’ve supplied them with food and water, continue to do so; they’re expecting it.

Be a Plant Explorer

All but the most southern gardens within a day’s drive of the Texas Panhandle have entered the winter rest. Most major botanic gardens celebrate the winter season with a festival of lights, from San Antonio, to Dallas, Oklahoma City, Albuquerque, El Paso, Tucson, Phoenix and Denver, inviting the public to enjoy lights, music, and special events. Visit the gardens just prior to dusk for examples of the structural merits of their gardens, and pick up professional design tips to use in your own garden.

Gardening Education

After shaking out the snow, relax at the fireplace, hot cocoa in hand. Warm and cozy, it’s a perfect setting for perusing old issues of garden magazines. Like most hard-core gardeners, I have kept all my back issues. Each time I flip back through them, I discover articles passed over, or information long forgotten. Many times the articles I’ve read had sparked an interest in a design feature or new plant group. Revisiting the magazines triggers pleasant memories of the garden throughout the years.

Angie Hanna

Points of Interest

Basic Gardening Principles (Xeriscape Principles)

  1. Plan and design
  2. Analyze and amend the soil
  3. Create practical turf areas
  4. Efficient use of water
  5. Choose appropriate plants
  6. Use mulches
  7. Practice appropriate maintenance

Ecologically Friendly

  • Plant best adapted species
  • Plant in preferred season
  • Balance mineral content of soil
  • Build and maintain soil organic content—humus
  • Do not harm beneficial soil life
  • Consider insects and diseases as symptoms of a violation of one of the above guidelines.

November & December QuickSteps

Plan and design. Evaluate landscape for structural design – the bones of the garden. Evaluate plant winter interest.

Analyze and amend the soil. Add leaves and other yard cleanup to compost pile.

Create practical turf areas. Perform winter maintenance to mower and power tools.

Choose appropriate plants. Plant spring bulbs. Plant trees.

Efficient use of water. Perform maintenance on irrigation system. Water as needed for winter schedule. Winterize.

Use organic/inorganic mulches. Replenish mulch if necessary.

Practice appropriate maintenance. Clean out and store pots and containers. Clean garden equipment. Finish minor fall bed cleanup. Tap heavy snow from laden branches. Use a calcium chloride de-icer for ice buildup on sidewalks and driveway.

Integrated Problem Management Steps

  • Observation
  • Recognizing and accessing the problem
  • Monitoring the effects and evaluating the damage
  • Management of the problem
    • Appropriate cultural practices
    • Mechanical methods
    • Biological methods
    • Natural and synthetic chemical methods