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THIS ARTICLE COPY RIGHT FREE
Please credit: Reprinted with permission
from The American Ivy Society.
The American
Ivy Society
Garden Calendar
By Gillia Hawke
FALL
Lift container-grown ivies and replant back into the ground for
the winter and water thoroughly. (Southern gardeners can disregard
this chore!). Cover south and west facing newly planted ivies
with a floating row cover such as GardenQuilt or Reemay®
to afford them constant shade and some shelter from the elements.Don't
forget to take cuttings to propagate over winter in clear plastic
boxes or any similar container under lights. This will give you
an inexpensive supply of new ivies to plant outside early next
spring. This is a good way of gardening throughout the long winter.
WINTER
Enjoy winter walks inspecting and admiring the beautiful winter
colors on your ivies. Look at the maroon colored ivies with white
veins and the many variegated ivies with pink color on their
leaves. Don't forget to read all your ivy books again and the
Journals which always seem to have additional information that
you might have missed the first time around. Fill out order blanks
from the ivy catalogs and try one or two.
SPRING
Rake off any tree leaves that have matted down on the ivy beds.
Fertilize ivy beds early by broad casting any good granular fertilizer
such as 12-12-12.Trim back any ivy strands that have been killed
by winter's low temperatures. (We call it "natural pruning.")
Start training your ivy by trimming or placing it where YOU want
it to grow, either as an edger, into a circle, or up a tree or
topiary form. Plant new ivies using Osmocote or other a slow
release fertilizer in the bottom of the hole. Don't forget to
plant the new ivy deeper than it was previously growing.
Try using ivies in containers such as window boxes
and in mixed planters for that soft, trailing look. Ivies are
very agreeable and do not mind being moved in the spring for
container planting and back again into the ground for the winter.
Always water well and mulch with stones, wood chips, purchased
mulch, -anything that will keep the new ivy moist.Take any ivies
that you have had inside over the winter outside for the summer
- they will love it!Watch for black spot on ivies and remove
and destroy all leaves that you pick off.
SUMMER
Continue planting new ivies and keep any newly planted ivies
watered if it turns dry in the summer months. But rejoice, you
don't have to water any established ivy plants, they seem to
be truly drought tolerant!!!
Enjoy ivies in different places throughout your
garden. There are ivies for every single flower bed - shade or
sun - even some that can be used as a single perennial that 'will
never take over the world'.
Remember, no matter what time
of the year -
Think IVY!!!
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