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As
the hot blush of summer fades away, the gardening season comes to a close.
But don't put your tools away just yet. There's still much to be done.
Fall
is a great time to scrutinize your garden. Look for overcrowded, barren,
or other unsatisfactory areas that need improving. If planting can wait
until next spring, a little soil enrichment now will encourage healthy
growth later on.
Here
are some hints for maintaining and enhancing your garden in fall:

Take
preventive measures
- Trees,
especially evergreens, continue to lose moisture in winter. Lack of
water is one of the main reasons why evergreens sometimes turn brown
in spring. It is important to deeply water trees and shrubs before hard
frosts begin.
- Divide
overgrown perennials to promote healthy growth.
- Clean
woody debris and fallen leaves out of ponds.
- Move
your potted plants indoors or bury the pots in the ground so they can
survive the winter.
- Set
out traps for slugs, which breed in fall. Make a tantalizing trap by
filling an empty tuna_fish tin with beer. In a shady spot, place the
dish in the soil so the rim is at ground level. Every few days, empty
out and refill the trap. Use this method only if absolutely necessary
as it can also drown beneficial creatures.

Enhance
garden soil
- Mother
nature generously provides us with a free source of soil nutrients in
the form of fallen leaves. Take advantage of this gift by using leaves
raked off your lawn to build up soil nutrients in planting beds. Once
the ground freezes, tender perennials can be protected with a deeper
mulch of leaves. Store excess leaves in loosely closed bags and add
them to your compost pile in batches.
- Apply
a thin layer of compost or well_aged manure to your lawn.
- Consider
planting a cover crop-such as annual rye grass or clover-in bare beds
or vegetable gardens to improve the soil. After the final harvest, but
early enough to allow some growing time before hard frost, enrich the
soil by adding compost or well_aged manure, then seed with the cover
crop. In spring, till the plants under a few weeks before planting.
- Add
annuals and potting soil from finished planters to your compost pile.

Winterize
for wildlife
-
Fall is a good time to maintain bird feeders and baths to fuel migrators
with food and water.
-
If your plants are healthy, leave the cleanup of perennials until next
spring-dead stems trap snow and provide seeds for birds.
-
Wrap the trunks of young trees and shrubs and ensure that mulch is at
least 30 centimetres away from their base to protect them from hungry
rodents. Burlap around evergreens will shelter them from wind, sun,
and grazing animals.
-
Fall is the perfect time to pest-proof your house against wildlife.
Once you have ensured that intruders are gone, seal entry points to
your attic or chimney.

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