UofA and NAU fans know how to dish out grief this week.
I posted a quick video tutorial how to protect the landscape from cold. Proudly worn were my schools colors for all to see. The video was educational while making fun of ourselves all at once. Take a look:
Dim lights Embed Embed this video on your site
February is the ideal planting season for fruit trees so this week’s featured plant is the Ranger Peach. This big juicy fruit ripens in colors of red to gold. The Ranger blooms later than others with extra vigor and an abundance of dark green foliage. The peach flesh is easy on the eye, easy to get off the seed and even easier to eat fresh off the tree, in pies or jams. A good size, mature enough to fruit, will cost under $60 and should produce for a June harvest if planted early.
Most of us have gardened in places where the soil is rich, its pH perfectly balanced and the climate is blessed with consistent rainfall, gentle sun, and plant coddling humidity. Mountain soil and climate present the opposite of such ideal gardening conditions.
My words are limited here, but they’re enough that I can sketch out the big picture of mountain gardening. The local USDA garden zone is 6b with a definite influence from zone 7. This defines our area as mild, but with a definite winter and possible subzero temperatures.
Low winter temperatures provide the chilling necessary to grow all the deciduous fruits and perennials that thrive in the coldest climates. The list includes apples, peaches, cherries, grapes, and berries. This climate also is conducive to blooming deciduous shrubs such as lilac, forsythia, hardy camellia, rose of Sharon, butterfly bush, and Russian sage. Some of the nicest roses in the country thrive here without the tedious demands of constant tending. That’s because, thanks to the low humidity and mild winters, mountain roses experience few problems with bugs, mildew, and virtually no black spot.
The climate is so mild that we garden and design landscapes 12 months of the year. The average last frost date in spring is Mother’s Day. However, spring is so mild our cool season gardens can be planted as early as March 1. These can include lettuce, spinach, broccoli, potatoes, onions, radishes, and more.
The first light frost happens on or about Halloween, depending on your garden’s specific elevation, but gardens look great through Thanksgiving. This makes the average frost-free growing season in the area approximately 150 days long.
Never, but never, underestimate the Arizona sun, wind, and dry air. They are major influences in determining which plants do well in our landscapes, and which ones won't. Local soils are typically heavy clay with very little organic material. Therefore, soil preparation for planting is of extreme importance. It demands the addition of organic mulch to your soil to either hold in the moisture for granite soils, or to keep clay soils from compacting. Our soil is alkaline and usually doesn’t need the addition of either lime or wood ashes, which would increase its already high pH.
When selecting plants for mountain landscapes look for those with thick, leathery leaves; they allow plants to retain extra moisture and to be less prone to tear in the area’s fierce windstorms. This is where it pays to talk to a gardening expert with some experience in local landscapes. It can save you a whole lot of time, energy, and expense in creating your landscape.
The area is surrounded by National Forest lands so mammals can be an issue. Javalina, deer, antelope, rabbit, squirrels, and gophers all have the potential to devour portions of a carefully planned landscape. It is essential to be very selective of the plants used in the landscape; this is another case where professional advice can save you a lot of headaches and costly errors. Physical fencing is highly effective. I use a low voltage electric wire to keep rabbits and javalina from tearing up my gardens. With the wire on an electric timer so it only cycles in the middle of the night when marauding creatures are active, I never need to worry about shocking effects on two-legged or four-legged family members.
Bitter tasting or highly fragrant animal repellents can be applied to plants’ new foliage with successful results. To continue their effectiveness, these bitter tasting or highly fragrant sprays need to be reapplied as spring plants flush new growth. Here again, it is best to ask for help from local gardeners. Garden here for more than a season and you quickly will find locals that either have given up because of the critters or have found ways to garden along side them. I have several printed handouts that tell which plants critters won’t eat. Ask for them the next time you visit the garden center.
Spring garden classes have been posted to my facebook page at www.facebook.com/watters1815 . Today at 9:30 we have ‘Wildflowers - How to Grow and Succeed’. Classes are held every Saturday through spring and on February 18 we have “Fruit Trees into Harvest” If you’ve read the column down to this point you will definitely enjoy February 25th and “The Most Fragrant local Roses’ with some hands-on demonstrations. Classes are free to my gardening friends, join me.
Until next week, I'll see you in the Garden Center.

RSS Feed
Facebook
Twitter