July is often one of the hottest months of the year and a great time to sit out and enjoy your garden. Keep plants looking good by regularly dead-heading, and you’ll enjoy a longer display of blooms. Make sure you keep new plants well watered, using grey water where possible, and hoe off weeds, which thrive in the sunshine. There’s plenty to do to keep the display going and to enjoy great crops, including harvesting veg at its peak and feeding the lawn. Summer is progressing.

1. Water anything recently planted

Anything you’ve planted in the past few months will need regular watering while it puts out roots into the surrounding soil and establishes itself. Make sure that you give these plants a thorough soaking rather than a gentle sprinkle.

2. Don’t stop with making compost

Try to maintain a green/brown balance in the compost heap throughout the summer. Green materials are soft, high in nitrogen and not necessarily green in colour, for example coffee grounds, veg peelings and leafy prunings. Brown materials are often drier, more fibrous and with a higher carbon content, for example, twigs, cardboard and wood (but not coal) ash. In the summer, most ingredients are green, which results in compost heaps with a lack of structure and air being squeezed out, so it’s important to add an equal proportion of brown ingredients.


3. Keep sowing veg

There are lots of veg that can be sown over the next few weeks to fill gaps as earlier crops are cleared and to give fresh veg into the autumn and winter.

  • Sow kohlrabi, lettuce, leaf beet, chard, endive, chicory, Florence fennel, chervil and coriander. 
  • Finish sowing beetroot and savoy cabbage in the first week of July. 
  • After mid-July, sow land cress, Chinese cabbage and spinach. 
  • From the end of July to mid-August, sow mustards, pak choi and salad rocket.

4. Lift onions

In about the middle of July, watch for when about two thirds of onion tops are falling over, then push the rest down to soften the neck as sometimes they can develop a long stem and a neck that doesn’t dry very well. You don’t need to wait until the tops go yellow before lifting, but you’re looking for the bulbs to begin to change colour. 

Pull them up and put them in a crate without being crowded so that air can circulate around them. Put it somewhere undercover such as in the greenhouse or garage. 

Allowing them to dry like this is important as they will store better. Done this way they should keep until spring. 

After they’ve dried in the crates for about a month, they’ll be ready to bunch up and hang in the house or in net bags until you need them.

5. Deadhead and keep deadheading

Most flowers lose their attraction as they fade, spoiling the overall appearance of beds, borders and containers. Removing these, by deadheading, helps keep displays looking better for longer. Deadheading also directs energy into stronger growth and more flowers, instead of (often unwanted) seed pods.

Prevents plants with numerous petals, such as peonies, some camellias and many roses, scattering old petals widely

Prevents plants from self-seeding – particularly useful for plants that self-seed readily and can become a nuisance, such as common valerian (Valeriana officinalis), sea holly (Eryngium) and lady’s mantle (Alchemilla mollis) 

6. Staking and support your plants

Supporting your plants is one of the most important jobs in June and July when there is often a great deal of height in the garden.

  • Stake tall growing bulbs such as dahlias, lilies and gladiolus. Their flowers will make them top heavy and liable to blow over in the wind without some support.
  • Loosen ties on trees and standard roses if they are becoming too tight. Fix tree ties so the buckle is on the opposite side of the stake to your tree, remembering to put the spacer in the middle to prevent chafing. Allow a little space for growing room but have it sufficiently tight so the tree cannot jiggle around excessively in the wind.

7. Keep your pond healthy and looking good

  • Look out for any yellowing leaves. If they are left on water lilies and other water plants, remove them promptly. Allowing them to fall off and rot in the water will decrease water quality.
  • Remove blanket weed. This will let oxygen into your pond. Use a net or rake and remember to give aquatic life a chance to get back to the water by piling the weed next to the pond for a day.
  • Top up water levels. Water can evaporate rapidly from water features and ponds in the height of summer, so top them up if the water level drops significantly. Rainwater from a water butt is best – chemicals in tap water can affect the nutrient balance in the pond. 
  • Hosepipe ban. If your area is under a hosepipe ban, you can still use it to top up your pond if you have fish.
  • Clear filters. Remember to clean any filters and pumps.

8. Feeding – a plan for the summer

Different plants have different nutritional needs and different fertilisers are available to meet them. Fertilisers are available in different combinations of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium with a different mix being needed for different parts for the garden.

Nitrogen encourages the production of strong stems and foliage, so fertilisers with high nitrogen levels are best for lawns and leafy vegetables.

Potassium-rich fertilisers help nourish flowers and fruit without over-feeding the stems, making them well suited to plants like dahlias and tomatoes.

Phosphorus is essential for seed germination and for young plants to develop good root growth. Root vegetables such as carrots and turnips need a high phosphorous fertiliser.


9. Take cuttings from shrubs and alpines

July is a good time to take cuttings from shrubs and alpines. Take the cuttings from non-flowering shoots and place them around the edges of small pots that are filled with peat and perlite. Water the cuttings in and keep them warm but out of direct sunlight.


10. Lift and divide wherever you can

Lift, divide and replant congested and over-sized clumps of early-flowering perennials such as bearded iris, polyanthus and pulmonaria once they’ve finished flowering. this will allow them to form roots and flower buds for next year in their new location before the weather gets too cold.

11. Trim hedges

July and August are key months to trim hedges such as hawthorn as birds will have stopped using them for nesting. Trimming them keeps them looking neat and restricts their growth. You can use shears, secateurs or hedge trimmers depending on the size of the leaves. For example, with small-leafed shrubs such as privet, shears or hedge trimmers will work. However, for large-leafed shrubs such as holly, shears will be best.

12. Don’t forget to feed the roses

It is a good idea to feed your roses in midsummer as this will help them produce a second flush of flowers. For any roses that have finished their first flush of flowers, trim them back before feeding. Roses need pruning because this encourages them to produce new shoots, since cutting back a branch helps the rose to produce a growth hormone. When cutting them, make a cut 5mm above an existing bud with gardening shears. Ensure the cut is angled away from the plant as this prevents rain water from collecting and causing disease as a result. 

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