Middleton Garden Center Hours: OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9AM TO 6PM AND SUNDAY 10AM TO 5PM Closed on Easter Sunday

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August 3rd marks the end of summer’s Dog Days. Cicadas and crickets sing us to sleep. Nights, though still warm, are noticeably longer. And sadly, summer days shorten. The season never seems long enough, but it’s time for gardeners everywhere to reap what they have sown.

Give your garden borders and containers a quick pop of color by replacing tired looking Impatiens and Geraniums with plants that will thrive in the cooler temperatures to come. Pansies, Kale and Garden Mums are all great choices. They’ll provide lots of color through summer’s end and into autumn. And if you’d rather plant perennials, don’t forget about Asters and all of the Ornamental Grasses. They’ll be spectacular as they begin to flower.

There are a few garden chores that are best done in August. Now is the time to divide your German Iris. Dig them up carefully and cut the fans back to 6 inches. Remove any damaged or mushy spots on the rhizomes. Discard any parts of your rhizomes that are affected by Iris Borers. Dip any cut ends in a 10% bleach/water solution. Then lay the fans in a shaded spot for a couple of days. When ready to replant, space your divisions about 5 inches apart and be sure to plant them just below the soil surface with fans pointing up. If you’d like to try some different varieties, new rhizomes should be arriving by the end of the month in the Garden Center.

Magnolia Scale is our newest garden scourge. Watch for sticky patches on leaves and gray, waxy structures on this year’s twigs. Even if your plants have been scale-free so far, we recommend that you treat the crawler stage now with a spray-on systemic insecticide. The Garden Center stocks a couple of choices. And mark your 2018 calendar for a late winter dormant oil spray.

And keep applying fungicide on any plants affected by Powdery Mildew as long as the weather stays humid. We’ve seen it on Peonies, Lilacs, Phlox and Ninebark. Serenade is our favorite treatment.

Autumn Crocus bulbs will arrive in the Garden Center by mid-month. And if you plant them right away, they will bloom this fall. Be sure to remember that these plants will send up leaves in the spring, followed by flowers in the autumn. Other fall bulbs, like Daffodils and Allium, will be here right around Labor Day. Who wants to take a guess what the newest tulip color or shape will be this year?

And don’t forget to enjoy an outdoor evening. Weather permitting, we’ll be out on the 12th. The Perseid Meteor shower will peak that night.

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