U of A University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture

Pictures of chickens, flowers, wheat, a boy looking through a magnifying glass, irrigation pipe, soybean pods, and fruits and vegetables.

Cooperative Extension Service

Cooperative Extension Service

Agricultural Experiment Station


Search | Publications | Jobs | Personnel Directory | Links
County Offices | Departments

About Us

Find Us

For the Media

Agriculture

Business & Communities

Families & Consumers

Health & Nutrition

Home & Garden

Natural Resources

4-H Youth Development

Public Policy Center

For Faculty & Staff

Giving

Dale Bumpers College
of Agricultural, Food &
Life Sciences


Division Home


Agricultural Experiment
      Station Home


Cooperative Extension
      Service Home

In the News - July 2008
Healthy gardens in the heat of summer

SEARCY, Ark. - July is the ideal time to enjoy the garden with minimal hassle, says Sherri Sanders, White County extension agent with the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture.

"July is a time when you can sit back for a moment and enjoy the fruits of your labor in the garden," she said, adding that there are a few ongoing tasks to perform to keep the garden beautiful, however.

In a garden with a wide variety of flower species, be sure to care for each flower properly. Heavy mulching will keep roots cool and moist, prolonging the flowering season of flowers like sweet peas. Shading the plants in mid-day will also maintain the quality of the flowers. Other plants, like pachysandra, ivy and climbing roses will root fairly quickly when layered into warm soil.

July is also the time to sow seeds of hollyhocks, English daisies, foxgloves, violas, Canterbury bells and sweet William into the garden for next year's bloom.

"Begin enjoying the harvest of your homegrown fruits, vegetables and herbs," Sanders said.

Replant empty areas of the garden with a fall-vegetable crop or a crop of clover to control weeds. Plant out successions of salad crops for continued harvesting throughout the summer. Sow seeds for cool‑season crops directly into the garden by mid‑July.

"Contrary to popular belief, a brown lawn isn't necessarily a dead lawn," she said. During times of drought, grasses become dormant, but will spring back to life when rain falls. Regular, deep watering will keep the lawn lush and green through the summer. Also, raising the height of the cutting blade on the lawn mower will help, because taller grass cools roots and keeps moisture in the soil longer. However, some people choose to let lawns go dormant in order to save on water expenses. Dormant lawns only need watering about once month.

July is the time to be on alert for slug and snail damage. The creatures will hide during the hot hours of the day, but emerge in the cool hours of the morning and evening.

"Seek and destroy all slugs and their eggs," Sanders said.

For more information on summer gardening, visit www.uaex.edu. The Cooperative Extension Service is part of the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture.

July 3, 2008

Media Contact: Lamar James
Extension Communications Specialist
U of A Division of Agriculture
Cooperative Extension Service
(501) 671-2187 or (501) 753-0207
ljames@uaex.edu

Related Links

E-Mail a Friend

Enter your friend's e-mail addresses
Separate multiple addresses with commas

 

Additional Stories:

In the News Archives

March 2008 | April 2008 | May 2008 | June 2008 | July 2008 | August 2008

 


© 2006
University of Arkansas
Division of Agriculture
All rights reserved.
Last Date Modified 08/27/2008
Webmaster

University of Arkansas • Division of Agriculture
Cooperative Extension Service
2301 South University Avenue
Little Rock, Arkansas 72204 • USA
Phone (501) 671-2000
 

MissionDisclaimerEEO
PrivacyFOI