Day: December 29, 2025

  • New Year Resolutions

    New Year Resolutions

    Thursday brings a new year and for some this means changes or “New Year Resolutions”. Following are a few resolutions you can adopt for the New Year when maintaining your yard.
    • Do – learn to identify beneficial insects so you can practice integrated pest management.
    • Do – remove rose leaves infested with black spot fungus from the rose garden to avoid spreading the disease.
    • Do – spray insecticides during the cooler times of the day, morning or evening, to avoid burning the plants.
    • Do – run your sprinkler system once in a while to be sure that coverage is correct
    • Do – keep your pruning tools sharp to avoid ragged cuts which could lead to disease.
    • Do – disinfect your pruning tools with a bleach solution after pruning diseased wood to avoid spreading the disease to healthy wood.
    • Do – install a rain sensor on your sprinkler system for automatic shut off during rains.
    • Do – plant a few perennials in your annual flower gardens for a spot of color through the hot, summer months.
    • Do – fertilize sparingly with a slow release fertilizer.
    • Do – harvest all of last years citrus crop so the tree can use its energy for the new crop.
    • Do – amend your soil when creating a flower or vegetable garden.
    • Do – scatter your fertilizer to the drip line of your trees.
    • Do – cut away any dead, diseased or interfering wood when pruning.
    • Do – use native plants whenever possible.
    • Don’t – apply more water to your entire lawn in an attempt to green up those brown spots. Adjust or repair your sprinklers for uniform coverage.
    • Don’t – fertilize flowering citrus trees. Wait for small fruit to set as nitrogen can cause flowers to drop, thus lowering your crop.
    • Don’t – operate power equipment around pedestrians, especially children. Stop until the pedestrian has passed or ask them to leave the area until the job is completed.
    • Don’t – cut your St Augustine grass shorter than 3 inches to avoid unnecessary stress, watering, etc.
    • Don’t – plant a shrub or tree with its roots wrapped in a ball. Straighten and spread the root ball to help the roots develop outwards.
    • Don’t – water your lawn more than twice a week.
    • Don’t – mow wet grass. It can be unsafe and spread disease.
    • Don’t – trim palm trees severely. If the frond is green and not interfering with anything leave it for the tree to use.
    • Don’t – put mulch against the stems and trunks of plants. The constant moisture will rot the bark eventually killing the plant.
    • Don’t – mulch citrus trees. They are susceptible to foot rot which is not curable and will kill the tree.
    • Don’t – damage the bark on your trees with a line trimmer or mower.
    • Don’t – fertilize in a ring around your trees.
    • Don’t – severely prune plants after mid October.
    • Don’t – plant a sun loving plant in the shade and vice versa
    • Don’t – cover your yard in rock.
    Happy New Year to all and best wishes for the lawns and gardens of Marco Island.  May they flourish to give Marco Island that tropical ambiance we all love so much.
  • One more day untill Christmas day

    One more day untill Christmas day

    Oh oh! Only one more shopping day until Christmas. Here are a few suggestions for last minute gifts for the gardener on your list.
    • Canvas tool bags so your tools are right there with you.
    • Garden carts to haul your supplies or your debris.
    • Bird baths or feeders or houses.
    • Bee and butterfly houses.
    • Potting bench
    • Kneelers so your gardener doesn’t face knee replacement surgery later.
    • A whole garden set including the canvas bag, a Hori-Hori, steel everyday pruners, by-pass pruners, trowel and cultivators.
    • Ratcheting pruning loppers
    • Telescoping pole saw.
    • Telescoping fruit picker
    • Folding seat with tools
    • Folding pruning saw (one of my favorite tools)
    • Weeding hoe
    • Twelve pair of Goat skin garden gloves (one per month)
    Christmas in Florida.  The balmy weather, palm trees swaying in the gentle breezes off the Gulf of Mexico and yards with green grass and colorful flowers.
    If you grew up in the North, like I did, your visions of Christmas are filled with pine trees and snow not palm trees and sunshine.  The first few years you live here it just doesn’t feel like Christmas!  But you get used to it and the cold fronts and rainy December weather help put you in the mood for the holidays.
    Another fact to help you learn to enjoy your Christmas with palm trees is the fact that Christ was born in Bethlehem, a land with landscapes and weather much like ours here on Marco Island.  So decorate your palm trees and rejoice in the fact that this is what Christmas is supposed to look like!
    I wish all of you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

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