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Carolina Gardens

Easter Lilies 101

Easter lilies

Easter lilies

First, two words of caution: 1) While your Easter lily is showing off inside, keep it away from cats, as even eating a few leaves can be very harmful to your feline friends; and 2) place the plant in a location where it won’t be brushed up against because the flowers’ golden yellow anthers are instant stain makers on both skin and clothes.

Here are a few pointers to help Easter lilies thrive outside:

Finally, don’t expect your Easter lily to blissfully bloom during the Easter season next year. In the garden, it will naturally begin to flower in early summer.

Clematis

Garden To-Do’s for April

  • For clematis to put on a proper flower show, remember, this divine vine has specific, essential requirements, including at least five hours of full sun a day. Also, the root zone should be kept cool and moist (not boggy) during the summer heat. Planting in well-worked, well-amended soil and adding three to four inches of mulch will take care of this need. Finally, go easy on nitrogen. Use either a low-nitrogen fertilizer or one that has time-release nitrogen because too much of this nutrient will result in plenty of new foliage, but lessen the number of beautiful blooms.
  • Cool-season veggies such as spinach, carrots, radishes, collard greens, parsnips and lettuce that were seeded outside last month should now be thinned to their proper spacing requirements.
  • Remember to set aside an area for the little gardeners in your family. Show them how to prepare the soil and then help the tykes grow such easy annuals as zinnias, sunflowers, pole beans or pumpkins.
  • If you haven’t given your dog or cat a flea and tick treatment in the last month, put any of their brushings around the bird feeder, and see how fast the fuzz flies away as building material for nests. And while it might be tempting to also add dryer lint, don’t — it could contain residual cleaning chemicals that can be unsafe for birds.

About the Author

L.A. Jackson is the former editor of Carolina Gardener Magazine. If you would like to ask him a question about your garden, contact L.A. at: lajackson1@gmail.com

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