Winterizing Garden - Transplanting
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How to Winterize an Ornamental Garden
Winterizing Garden - Fallen Leaves
Winterizing Garden - Mulching
Winterizing Garden - Watering for Winter
Winterizing Garden - Pruning
Winterizing Garden - Fertilizing
Winterizing Garden - Transplanting
Winterizing Garden - Bringing Houseplants In
Winterizing Garden - Planting Fall Bulbs
Plant a Tree - Planning
Pot your Plants - Choosing a Plant Container
How to Winterize an Ornamental Garden
April Gardening Tips
May Gardening Tips
June Gardening Tips
July Gardening Tips
August Gardening Tips
September Gardening Tips
Fast Fall Lawn Revival
Planting Cool Weather Vegetables
Top Fall Gardening Tips
Keeping Color in the Garden
Top Lawn And Garden Watering Tips
Late Summer Lawn Care
End of Summer Garden Maintenance
Top Tropical Garden Plants
Summer Watering Secrets
Making The Most Of A Mid-Summer Garden
Tips For A Deer Free Garden
Control Garden Pests The Natural Way
Pruning The Perfect Summer Garden
Early Summer Gardening Tips
Springtime Vegetable and Herb Planting
Spring Annuals Brighten Any Garden
Secrets To Spring Garden Success
Bring Your Lawn To Life
Spring Vegetable Garden Secrets
Spring Gardening With Perennials, Annuals And Bulbs
Top Tree Planting Tips
Spring Tree And Shrub Gardening Secrets
Get Garden Ready For Spring
Great Garden Winterization Tips
Make Garden Mosquitoes Disappear
Gardening With Organic Seeds
Organic Garden Planning
Organic Garden Pest Control
Conserving Water On Gardens And Lawns
Growing Tomatoes
Gardening - Fertilizing Basics
Summer Lawn Care
Gardening - Pollinators and Beneficial Insects
How To Build A Raised Flower Bed
Tips to Keep Small Critters Out of the Garden
How to Water and Fertilize Your Lawn
How to Build a Greenhouse
Mitch Baker is the Horticultural Specialist at the American Plant Garden Center and Nursery, in Bethesda, MD, focusing on natural gardening products and organic gardening. Mitch is a MD Certified Professional Horticulturist, with more than 34 years of experience in the garden center industry. He has studied at numerous horticultural institutions from New York to Oregon, and also serves on the board of the Rachel Carson Council.
Winterizing Garden - Transplanting
Professional horticulturalist Mitch Baker demonstrates how to winterize an ornamental garden including tips for transplanting.
Transcripts
Mitch Baker: Hi! I am Mitch Baker with American Plant in Bethesda, Maryland. We are talking about winterizing your ornamental garden and right now, transplanting is the topic. Fall is a great time to bring new plants into the garden but its also a great time to move things around in the garden and thats one of the beauties of perennials. Perennials are easily dug up and divided and you can fill in their spots in your garden or dig a perennial up, divide it and give a portion away to a friend or a neighbor. So perennials are terrific in the garden and this is a great time to divide them. So we will start with this fern, first I am going to cut it back so I can see what I am working with and I will make digging it up a little easier. So we will just take the top out a bit and again we are just taking a portion of this fern out of the ground and we are going to leave a portion behind. So now I can see the profile here. Now go ahead and dig this portion out then we can split that in half, we will put half right back in the ground here so that it has an opportunity to redevelop for three to five years before we may want to divide it again. Now rather than just place this fern back in the ground, this is our opportunity to improve the soil by adding a composted soil amendment. So we are going to incorporate some of this composted soil amendment or some of your own compost if you have it, if not, if you are going to buy something, buy a composted soil amendment. So that you add additional biology and humic matter to the soil, this maybe the only opportunity, certainly the best opportunity we have to improve the soil. So we will go ahead and work some of that composted soil amendment into this planting site as we put the fern back in the ground. Alright, we have easily dug up the fern that was here, we divided it, we put half of it back in the soil after we amended the soil with some composed or a composted soil amendment. Now, we are left with the generous portion to place somewhere else in the garden or to give to a friend or neighbor. And this can be done with most perennials this time of year. You can dig them up, move them around or dig them up and divide them and half back in the soil. This is the great thing about perennials; they are very easy to work with this time of year. So, that gets us to where we need to be with transplanting. Next up, we will talk about bringing those houseplants in for the winter.
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