Phil’s Garden Tips & Tricks for March 2022
March 20 is the date we have all been looking for. Spring 2022!
We had heavy rains in early winter, but it dried out later in January and February was a dry month (despite recent weather). Who knows what March will bring! March and April is the time to determine if this September you want to purchase more bulbs and specifically where you want to plant them so that Spring 2023 will be even more amazing! Make a note of it somewhere what exactly you will need to purchase in September 2022! The robins have set up their territories and are now loudly proclaiming at dawn. Our Oregon Chorus frogs are actively forming a symphony for our entire neighborhood from our back yard pond. The bees have been seen out visiting our spring blooms.
- This is the best time to purchase perennial plants at the nursery. Many of them are now in 4” size and ready to grow if you put them in the ground! 4” is less expensive than #1 containers! You will see, as the weather warms, these same plants, if left in the nursery, will grow out of their pots and the nurseries will then pot them up into #1’s or number #2’s and then of course the price will increase to reflect that work. This goes for shrubs and trees as well. Now is the time to get the best value for your purchase. If you wait till it is warm, the prices will increase, and you will miss the early bird choices and possibilities!
- It is important now, if you have not yet done it, to quickly prune off any of last year’s perennial ugly brown foliage that you did not get to. It is important to prune them before the new sprouts begin to come up.
- Continue weeding to prevent your weeds from going to seed! Seriously, if you weed now, summer weeding will be so much easier! And if you are going to use a pre-emergent weed control, now is a good time, just please be careful when using this sort of thing!!
- Continue baiting for slugs!
- This is the last good month for transplanting. Try to do it soon, before they sprout. If a plant is starting to sprout, it just might be best to leave it alone and wait for next fall to move it.
- Prune your spring-flowering shrubs after the blossoms fade, and only if they really need it.
- Trim or shear Winter-blooming heathers when the bloom period is finished - usually later in March. This keeps them nice and tight and full.
- Now is the time to cut off all your Western Sword Fern’s fronds to clean them up and get them ready to open all their new fronds. This is mainly where you look at them from a path or a window. Obviously, if you own a woodsy section, you will not want to trim all your ferns in the woods this way! No one does it out in the forest!
- Fertilize rhododendrons, camellias, and azaleas with compost, or, only if necessary, use an acid-type fertilizer (an indicator is that the leaves are yellow).
- Spread mulch over garden and landscape areas that didn’t get mulched last month.
- Lawn-mowing begins this month, so, set your blade at the lowest setting that you are comfortable with: 3/4”-1” for bent grass lawns; 1 1/2” to 2 1/2” for fine fescue and ryegrasses. Set it as low as you can without damaging the lawn. It will look really shorn after you do this, and it might take three tries to get it to the level that you want. The grass will be wet and green, and you do not want to clog up or kill your lawn mower! Do not leave the clumps on the grass this month as you will create brown spots. Throw the clumps into the beds or the composter.
- This is the time for the first 2020 application of lawn fertilizer after the first mowing. Our preference is an organic fertilizer (non-petrochemical, we suggest 16-5-5).
- Fertilize cane berries with manure/compost (we suggest 10-10-10).
- Prune out dead wood on raspberries, blueberries and gooseberries to keep them from getting too big, then spread wood shavings and, as needed, manure/compost.








