Summer garden tips and tour - deadheading plants is a priority
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- čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
- Deadheading plants helps keep your summer garden flowering for longer, but not all flowers should be deadheaded. Find out how and when to deadhead, and which flowers are better not deadheaded, in this summer garden tips and tour.
00:00 Welcome
00:08 The Middlesized Garden - weather and climate
01:11 What is deadheading?
01:22 Why deadheading creates more flowers in your garden
01:40 Which flowers should you NOT deadhead?
03:39 How to deadhead roses
05:20 A tip for dealing with black spot on rose leaves
05:41 Sarah Raven plants, books, courses, accessories: www.sarahraven.com/
05:57 Salvia nursery Dyson's Salvias www.dysonsalvias.com/ are based at Great Comp Garden: www.greatcompgarden.co.uk/
06:09 Plants to deadhead include cosmos, dahlias, penstemons, delphiniums, bedding plants including pelargoniums and other plants which flower again in the same year.
06:12 How to deadhead plants
06:25 How often should you deadhead? (As often as you can manage, if there are dead flowers!)
06:31 How to make a flower border look amazing: • How to make a flower b...
06:59 These are the snipper I bought on Frances' recommendation. Note that links to Amazon are affiliate and help support this channel (see below): amzn.to/3ytUZ9n
07:11 Should you pinch out young cosmos plants?
08:40 Growing alchemilla mollis in the cracks between pavers
09:24 Deadheading or 'cutting back'?
09:42 Should you deadhead lavender?
09:53 The best way to prune English lavender (blog post): www.themiddlesizedgarden.co.u...
10:26 Garden tips and tours playlist 2022: • Garden tours and tips ...
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As a Northern California gardener for the past 22 years, stumbling on your channel was one of the best things that ever happened to my gardening world. Your advice is pure gold. You don't just give a couple tips, you give a cornucopia of knowledge to your viewers! I shall gladly give a "Thanks" donation, and subscribing was a definite! Thank you!
Thank you so much!
The salvia trick with the roses has worked incredibly well with my Rosa Mundi hedge. It suffered terribly with black spot and mildew and with just 3 small salvias the whole hedge ( 4 mature plants) is free of both for the whole season.
I will definitely try this. I already love the blue/purple of salvia paired with the rose colors I favor (mostly white to pink and deep rose), so this is no hardship at all. Thank you for confirming this tip!
That's amazing. I will try this as l had such terrible black spot the last 2 summers because of unusually constant wet & cool weather.
I will try this- thanks for the tip!
Wich sort of salvia did you use/recomend?
Wow, I would never guess this for a fungus. Insects, yes, but a fungus? Wow. Going to try this.
I was frankly shocked when Frances said she deadheads four times a day!! But can’t argue with success - her garden is breathtaking. I’m not doing that but, with you and she in mind, I have at least doubled my deadheading since hearing that and my garden has looked way better!! Thank you for your thoughtful videos.
What refreshing humility and graciousness you possess, Alexandra! Even when someone seems "very cross about" your advice, you are determined to seek the correct answers (there are often more than one) and share it with your viewers. Thank you.
As to pulling out the lavender hedge, could you just pull out the parts growing over the path and then simply plant a shorter plant that won't spill onto the path? Perhaps even surrounding the entire hedge with it? I love the lavender and would hate to see it go. 🌼🌿
The bees love it too and it’s so lovely to hear their ‘humming’ during the Summer months
Thanks so much for the ideas on deadheading and trimming with shears in some cases. It was very clear and I like how you get to the point😊. Your garden is beautiful. You are so knowledgeable yet open to others opinions… showing grace to others..a good example to me.🥰
S K I p
Also thank you for Sarah Raven suggestion about planting salvias next to roses, to inhibit black spots. Will be definitely doing that on some roses that have more black spot.
Me too! It also is deer resistant so no black spot and keeps deer from eating my roses . Awesome!
I saw this tip last year, and I tried it out in my garden almost every rose had at least a salvia. And this year I see the ones with are almost ( next to one leaf) free from black spots. The ones that didn't are still struggling with black spots. So out of this experiment, I would say it's successful. And plus salvia's are really beautiful and some of them smell really lovely :)
@@estardeepbrown thank you very much for sharing your experience. That was so reassuring and useful 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻I don't have black spots with every rose. Only 2 of them are affected. Some black spots disappeared after I manured some roses and watered them regularly from below directly, avoiding leaves. They developed very healthy foliage since. But 2 of them persist with black spots, so I will definitely try salvia.
Love the Chelsea Chop on your hair!
When I saw you walking through the lavender I thought: Oh, how lovely! Finally she will erase a cloud of beautiful smell when she walks that path and it will cling to her clothes for a while so she can actually enjoy it longer. Before, the lavender was too short for that. But now she has it in abundance. - So, I would not take it out! When you cut it back the structure of your parterre will be obvious again for many months. Just now you have the opportunity to really smell it when you go through, wheras you otherwise would not smell it if you did not intetionally touched it, wouldn't you? (People who went around it just were considerate and did not want to destroy it or where afraid of spiders😄.)
The comment on getting trolled about cosmos pinching cracked me up. “Well that’s a bit extreme”. Great attitude, I love her.
I've cut one of my lavender plants completely down to the wood because it didn't look good anymore. It came back and now it looks really beautiful 💜 I should do it with the others as well.
I thought your humble response to the, well, rude comment about your advice was lovely. Yet you put the rudeness aside and looked into the question in a measured way in order to find the answer(s). Well done, and a good example of civil behavior.
Thank you. It was slightly upsetting to read at first, but of course this person may have had problems in their life (one of which cannot have been me pinching out salvias!) and had been feeling grouchy.
Extremely informative and detailed. Thank you for not assuming we know what you’re referring to, but actually showing us. Finally someone who gets it!
Thank you!
It was lovely to see your garden in real life when it was open 2 weeks ago as part of the Faversham Open Gardens. It was the first day of our holiday in Kent and my husband and I had a lovely time in Faversham. I did tell you I watched your CZcams videos, so although you didn't know me, I knew you and your garden! Thank you for your tip about salvias and roses, I must try that next year, my roses have dreadful black spot this year.
It was very nice to hear from you, I enjoyed meeting a few Middlesized Garden CZcams viewers. I hope the rest of your holiday went well.
Some really excellent advice! I am in Northern Canada in a Zone 0 or 1 depending on who you ask. I think pinching out Cosmos is really a personal choice of how you want the plants to look. Since I am in such a cold zone with a very short season, I never pinch my cosmos. The Cosmos can then grow really tall and become a real statement. I always have learned that if a plant down south will grow to three feet, I might get 1 to 1 1/2 feet in a growing season. But I do have an (Sometime) advantage of lots of sun. At its peak it will rise at 3 am and set after Midnight. Longest days never really get dark! I say it is sometimes an advantage because a lot of plants that say "Sun Loving" do not love that much sun. Such a different climate.
This is such an informative video! I now realize I haven’t been deadheading enough or cutting back stems to make bushier plants. Thank you.
I enjoyed this. I like it that she is open minded and civil to people with different opinions. We need people like her in the US!
I was a bit upset at the time, but it's much better to use that energy to find out more!
Hello Alexandra, I just wanted to say a huge thank you for your weekly tips and encouragement !
You have a realistic approach which helps people like me that could feel totally overwhelmed by the tasks in my garden ! Your recommendations for garden tools have been very useful , I am now the proud owner of a very robust wheelbarrow !
I always give my cosmos a good chop back here in NZ. It comes away well every time. It’s such a great filler in borders. This week I am pruning roses and so looking forward to spring growth and this years blooms. Thanks for your garden tips - so look forward to seeing you whenever your able to film.
Thank you!
Your hair is beautiful. And, of course, your information is very welcome. Thank you.
Thanks for the great tips. I enjoy deadheading, and find it theraputic,and it does keep the flowers going for longer.
I actually enjoy deadheading, it makes me look at the garden even more closely snd I find it relaxing. I am a bit reluctant to 'pinch' plants but determined to overcome this fear of ruining the plant as bushier plants would be better. Will certainly try salvias with roses although blackspot not too bad this year here. Have a lovely week Alexandra.
Thank you, and I know what you mean about pinching out, I'm always convinced that the plant will be ruined.
"actually"
@@TheMiddlesizedGarden A nursery owner once told me that many plants (among those that he had in his nursery, anyway) evolved to be browsed by animals. That action made the plants more compact and stronger. A lot of times, especially in home gardens, those browsers are no longer present, so it becomes our responsibility to mimic their behavior. It gave me a new perspective on pinching back.
great tips as always! Thank you!
I followed someone's advice and sprinkled cornflour round the base of my roses to stave off black spot. It seems to have worked. Love your videos.
Great tip!
Ooh! When do you need to do it? How often?
Would you kindly explain in more detail? Do you use flour (cornmeal), masa harina, or cornstarch? Do you apply early spring or mid-summer? I'll research it, but it'd be great to hear from your experience. Thank you!
@@irairod5160 I sprinkled it round the stems in spring (April time) quite thickly. I believe our cornflour might be your cornstarch. Hope it works for you.
@@margaretstephens7614 I appreciate you taking the time to reply! I will make a note for next spring and see if it prevents the black-spot on my roses. As for the magic ingredient...corn flour, for me, is yellow and grainy (similar to polenta) and usually labeled "cornmeal". I make cornbread, muffins, pudding, pancakes, and fritters with it. Masa-Harina is finely-milled white corn preserved with lye, and is used for tamales, tortillas, pupusas, and arepas. It's also the main ingredient in a drink called "atole", very popular in Mexico and Central America. Cornstarch is a very fine white powder, used to thicken sauces and to make gelatin-like desserts, like Hawaiian "haupia" and Caribbean "tembleque". I will do a little bit more research to see which is the one I should sprinkle around my roses. Or, since I only have 3 bushes, maybe I'll conduct an experiment and use a different corn flour around each one and see what happens! Thanks again for your kindness.
Very informative as always, love the salvia hint 👌 really enjoy your channel, thank you
Super helpful... thank you
another great informative video, thank you Alexandra !
Thank you for all the info.
Thank you for your wonderful videos, have a great weekend in the garden, nothing better😀
Wow; never knew salvia could help with the black spot. I will surely try this!!!
I love this!!
One of my highlights of the week, thank you Alexandra. 👌💕🌿🌺🌱🌷🌾
Good advice🌿thank you
Alexandra I’ve loved watching your channel over the last year or so and as your video styles has become more intricate so has my garden become more intricate. Directly an outcome of your work!
Your garden is so beautiful!
Always such good tips. Thankyou. I might try the Salvia amongst the roses.
This was very helpful
Alexandra, thank you so much for your videos. You have been such a wealth of inspiration and wisdom on all things gardening. We lost about 5 trees this year and it opened up a lot of our land to the sun and I'm looking back into your previous videos to get ideas for gardens I might want to put where the trees were. I just wanted to say thank you!
Thanks for all the good tips, especially the cosmos one. I have these growing in different parts of my garden so I’m going to try this on some of them and see which I prefer.
This was so helpful and sensible. Thank you. What I like that you put a label up for each flower. I like to leave the flowers of my Catmint for a while because our Goldfinches love them.
Very helpful - thank you
Great tips!
So good! Thank you!
Thank You
Great video as always & very informative. I always look farward to the weekend to see your great videos.
Thank you!
Well now I've just spotted your beautiful hound - gorgeous! Yes I think I'm going to follow up with the salvia advice as well - I do a similar thing with chives around the apple tree and it really helps guard against scab. Thanks Alexandra - really enjoyed this.
Thank you so much, always, for your informative and beautiful garden tours and tips. I’m in Zone 9a US and had a gorgeous spring flush of my ‘Blessed Child’ rose, deadheaded, and somewhat disappointed not to see another rose yet this summer. I’ll have to re-watch your Rose Expert video again for tips. It is a delight to watch the show again, regardless of outcomes here in FL! ☘️
Another fabulous, brilliant video. Thank you so much x 🧡💛🧡👌🌜🙏😇🇦🇺🕊️
As always, another outstanding episode!
Thank you!
You inspired me to go outside today and deadhead some flowers that were declining. Thank you!
Things are late here in the North of France and therefore so is dead heading. It has been so dry and chilly. But when things really take off then it is a pleasure to wonder around the garden on a summer morning dead heading. Thanks for your video, it's lovely as usual.
This is my favorite deadheading video on CZcams. It's very thorough. Also I'm definitely going to try pinching my cosmos!
Amazing lavender.
All my plants and flowers love the Grateful Dead already so job done.
I watched a video yesterday of a tour of David Austin’s private rose garden. I noticed beautiful salvia plants in the garden with roses. Now I know why.
Great video. 😊
Love your videos Alexandra. Thank you. I am new to gardening and would love a video all about pinching , what it means and how to do it and with what particular flowers?
Love that you pursued the why behind the cosmos comment. Makes sense from the different perspectives, doesn’t it! Do you chop and drop your deadheaded or cut back plant material or take it to the compost? Are you completely removing your older lavender plants? Is that what you,rant by ‘they have to go’ or did you mean the majority of the top growth has to go? Finally, absolutely adore the new hairstyle. Brilliant! Thank you for another wonderful vlog, Alexandra.
@Christopher Johnson Virginia now. Raised in Idaho.
Very useful thankyou
thank you so much for your wonderful advice; going out to cut my cosmos as it's too tall and unstable. Didn't know I could do that; would rather have it bushy. You are such a joy to watch as I always learn something new.
In the Pacific Northwest we've had hardly any sun until mid-July, and yet flowering plants are much happier and more abundant than usual. Temps have been in the upper 60s!
Interesting! Of course, once I said that our summers were generally mild, we were hit with the heatwave of a lifetime!
Very informative 🙏🏻I will subscribe!.
Thank you!
Loved the rose pruning experiment!!
Thank you!
How happy I am to have discovered your channel! Thank you for a great video, and I look forward to learning more from you.
Thank you!
Thankyou Alexandra for all your wonderful tips. I adore your garden. Thankyou for sharing with us.
Thank you!
I enjoy your videos so much Alexandra. You do such a very nice job making it easy for us to watch and learn and refer back. Thank you. Your own garden is just gorgeous and I am so intrigued by the loud sea gull cries in the background. You seem to have the best of all worlds!
Thank you, yes, we are about 10 minutes or so away from the sea, which is lovely in summer (and far enough away in winter not to be too buffeted about)
LOVE THIS
thank you
Wonderful 👍🏻
I pinched out mt Cosmos this year, for the first time & i must say I shall be doing it again ! It's been a great display. I even have some decent length in some of my stems. I'm in south east Cheshire with a very sunny, south facing garden. I'm deadheading every evening, it's my wind down time :)
Watched this again as a reminder, now that NZ is in the heat of summer😢Thanks again Alexandra, and happy 2023.
Happy 2023, hope you are having a good summer.
Thankyou so much for this lovely informative video. I think deadheading and cutting back is my favourite garden “chore”, it’s gentle (mostly!) and soothing. I have a huge lavender outside my back door which I have to push my way through, like yours. I want to gather the flowers and then it will have to go but I’ll plant more in another area. I’m behind your flowering season here in the north east of Scotland. Thankyou for your advice and good common sense!
Thanks!
With respect to Lavender, I’ve taken to leaving it & pruning it back in Spring. When I do that Yellow Finches come for the lavender seeds and since my plants are up close to my house I get to enjoy watching them. If I want the stems, for fragrance or potpourri then I will cut them back in August, too. Love watching & saving your videos for Winter months when snow covers my gardens, and I can plan for another season the following year. Watching near Niagara Falls Canada
I’m in Pennsylvania and wait till early spring to cut back my lavender as well.
It is such a coincidence to see your comment about Yellow Finches. I saw one for the first time yesterday when it came for the lavender.
The garden is so beautiful. I really enjoyed your video. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you!
Loved the helpful video as always! I find deadheading very relaxing and I feel it makes my garden look refreshed and my plants do so much better if I deadhead. I garden in Virginia USDA Zone 6
Dianthus for me in dry (except for this year’s unusual weather) US Zone 5b - it has made me a deadheading believer! I’m growing Cosmos for the first time and will compare pinching or no-pinching. I appreciate your tip about growing salvia amongst roses to discourage black spot. My perennial salvia are about 12 feet/3 meters from the roses. I’ll move some directly between the lovely yellow shrub roses. Always a pleasure to see your garden and hear your advice.
My lavenders surround themselves with baby starts which have been useful in increasing my border plants. They are such a wonderful wildlife plant and very tolerant of heat, although I find they bloom much brighter with regular watering in dry weather. I get about 10 years out of mine, they are good value too! 💚 Thank you for the tips, I learned a lot!
first time watching. I'm from Maine USA always find it interesting to hear advice from other gardners.
Thank you!
Flowers are my favorite things to grow, can't get enough of them, they last a long time into the winter here in far northern Ca
That was a great topic to review. I always dead head roses, daisies, phlox, poppies. The rest go to seed. Also I do pinch back phlox but only 1/3 per plant in June, this gives me double bloom time, the pinched ones have smaller blooms but I'm after September color.
Alexandra - that Acanthus is stellar. Another great video.
Thank you!
How interesting - using salvias to avoid black-spot! Great solution!!
Thanks for the tip. I’m compulsive about dead heading and you taught me new things.
Thank you!
Thanks for the video. I am in Dorset and it seems that all I am doing in the garden at the moment is deadheading and waterering pots ☺
What a marvellous youtube discovery, a beautiful presentation, well done
Glad you liked it!
Thank you for the video. I started pinching my cosmos this year, I am pleased with how much more sturdy they are. Although I may plant more in another spot and let them be tall a wavy in the breeze. I enjoy that cosmos are such laid back easy going plants.
They're such good fillers for gaps.
Taman yang indah mom, mengesankan sekali . . . . . 👍
I have trimmed the coleus back and am rooting some in water in my kitchen, rooted basil too. We cut roses back to the next stem with leaves of five. Am collecting the seed heads of cilantro too. Thanks.
Wonderful tips as usual 🙂. I thoroughly enjoy a good garden experiment such as what you did when pruning the roses as well as your very simple tip on deadheading them by visual cues without knowing the variety. Thanks!
Thank you!
I purchased a pair of these snips having watched the video, they are brilliant thank you, my sister tried them and immediately ordered her own!
Glad you like them!
Lordy, I wish I had a garden. You have a wonderful space there ✨
Thank you!
I adore deadheading also!!
Aloha Alexandra, your rose colored top is a great color on you! Many thanks for the tips on deadheading. It gives me confidence to know that I’m doing it correctly. I’m in zone 11b/12a and let me tell you, 80% of “gardening” here is editing-pruning, deadheading, shearing, keeping plants at bay!
I dead head more deeply, to keep the plants from flopping. Alexandra, thank you for another information packed video. I am very interested to see what you will use to replace the lavender.
Thank you, very informative as always. I'm so glad to see how you dead head now I know I'm doing it right. Black spot - again thank you I will stop worrying too much about mine, and will continue to take out bad leaves clean my snippers, and dispose of the leaves carefully. Your dog is lovely.
Thank you!
I will most definitely try the salvia with roses. We have terrible blackspot here; hot humid summers. In desperation I resorted to spraying, which worked, but I hate doing it. I've been trying to be more active in deadheading and it does really pay off. My Knockout roses are blooming nearly non-stop with regular deadheading. After the big primary flush of blooms in June, I shear them, then just snip out finished blooms as they appear throughout the summer.
I’m in zone 6a in New York State and we’re having the same average temperatures you are having but that is very cool here so most of my flowers are a good 3-4 weeks behind where they would normally be and some of the more heat loving ones may not even fully flower this year. There’s always next year!
I like your hair cut! This was an excellent video, so very helpful.
I latched on to Sara's idea of using the salvias under the roses (and any other plant susceptible to mildew issues!) about a year ago, but have yet to try it as I still haven't added my rose selections to my garden.
I WAS planning on doing it this year, but...
I'm in Texas, and our Summer heat arrived VERY early this year, which threw all my plans off track.
(I often marvel at your delightfully low Summer temperatures accompanied by your same Winter temperatures that we have! How wonderful it must be!!)
Back to reality in Texas...
At 1st I thought it was just going to be a short lived heat wave.
Alas, the heat decided to stay!
(We're now in excess of 100° as a "norm". phewww! 🥵 )
So all my new rose ideas were moved to the back burner.
Actually, many things are now waiting for the cooler temps of Fall.
However, I'm very glad to see your video today bringing this Salvia idea up.
We have consistent high humidity year round, so anything keeping the powdery mildew at bay is welcome in the garden!
I see in the comments others have tried this great trick, and it's working!!
This is really good to see!!!!!
I now have even higher hopes for this plan, mostly bcuz I too don't use chemicals in my yard.
Thank You so much for sharing this info! ❤️
Oh-
One question creeped into my mind about using the Salvias...
I kinda wonder if certain varieties of Salvia work better than others in this regard?
I mostly wonder this bcuz so many salvias have been bred to create certain characteristics that we like to see visually, it makes me wonder if the sulfer aspect of the salvia (which I believe is what Sara explained keeps the mildew away) has been bred OUT of certain salvia varieties, or perhaps been made a little bit weaker... ?
In Texas we have access to SO MANY varieties, as our climate is perfect for them.
While this is fantastic, it can also get overwhelming when trying to choose!
It's not as if the sulfer content of each variety would be listed on the plant tag!
Anyway, maybe I'm over thinking the whole plot of using the salvia for this purpose!?
I really don't know!
I welcome all opinions on this subject!
Does anyone have any ideas, or experience with using any Salvias that did NOT work as well for this purpose?
I had also learned of Sarah Raven growing salvias by roses to help deter the spread of blackspot so I gave it a go this year and planted the short leaved varieties Sarah recommends and so far its been a success. Crossing my fingers all will be well right through the growing season and if so will plant more salvia.
Excellent, I'm glad to hear that.
Way to get to the bottom of the pinching out issue. I appreciate someone who will investigate both sides of a story. Thank you for this lovely videos. I found it very interesting and informative.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you in particular for explaining the reasons to pinch out - or not pinch out - cosmos. I think the same principle applies to the chelsea chop, which I find works well in a border if done to only a proportion of each type of plant, so that you have some larger earlier flowers on taller stems, followed by smaller, later flowers on shorter, bushier plants. You are so right that the methods we use depend on the outcome we are working towards, not on what’s right or wrong 😊
Yes, you're right, it's much the same as the Chelsea chop.