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If you need a reminder that has finally landed in summer, the berries are here to remind you. The home garden is seen with small colored ornaments of strawberries, current and oso berries. Cherries, raspberries and blueberries are blushing with colors because they cook, such as peons and eraes fade. Peas are popping with long vines, nastartiums are spreading in the garden beds, and spring-trick-spinach and shard sky are high. This is the first time to enjoy the loot of your summer garden.

About cooking about cherry, blueberry, and raspberry.
Credit: Amanda Blum
Sorting And trellising
To bloom within two weeks of your lilac, you should consider bringing them back. This occurs when the plant will determine the bloom for the next season, and in some lucky cases, you may bloom a second, fall. You want to take more as the stems of the plant, so you encourage new growth each year. This is a case for all your early summer blooming bushes and trees, such as Azaliya, Forcethia, Japanese Karya, Weigella, Deutzia, Mock Orange, St. John’s Wibernams, and Red or Yellow Dogwoods.

Lilac after blooming
Credit: Amanda Blum
Pruning should be extended to your tomato, which is now installed in the ground. If you want to proun for suckers, it depends on what kind of trailis system you have set. If you are allowing uncertain tomatoes to only a strong “leader” or stem, then aggressively prun, but you will need long trailis. Also make sure to cut any diseased parts of the plant, but remember that you only want to touch your tomatoes after the morning dew dries, and with clean scissors. Spray with lisol or other disinfectant in the middle of the plants, so you are not spreading any disease.

Tomato plants are growing in trailis.
Credit: Amanda Blum
Once your strawberries are fruits, bend them back and mulch them, so they will not continue to spend their energy growing runners, but will focus on root growth for next year.
Fruitful

Fruit drop occurs when a tree drops fruit, it cannot support (left). The remaining fruit, on the right, Ripon.
Credit: Amanda Blum
Your pear, apple, stone fruits – such as peaches, plums, cherries and nectar – and even fig trees will have fruit sets, and the fruit has also gone through the drop, a common phenomenon where the tree drops cannot handle. With the fruit still on the tree, you should decide on quantity or quality. Thinning the fruit on each branch will allow the tree to be made large, delicious fruits. You can also shroud the fruit at this point, To protect from aggressive insects or animals, covering the fruit with a gauze bag. Grapes are also true. Your vines should be taken out well at this point, which means that you can preserve grape leaves to use freshly or later, and then shroud all your growing grape bunches. This will make them very easy to harvest, and will also protect them from birds, racoon and mice.

Small grapefruit flakes immersed in a blurred bag.
Credit: Amanda Blum
Fertilization
It is important that you not only give water to your vegetables, but feed them. In addition to the plant -pecifical fertilizer (tomato fertilizer, blueberry and azelia fertilizer, etc.), you should consider weekly treatment of manure tea. If you do not have a vermicomposter to make your own fertilizer tea, buy compost tea bags and make something. Apply tea with a sprayer (on the entire plant). Your tomatoes can also benefit from the treatment of calcs or rot stop, which will provide more calcium to the plant to help prevent tomato bloom on the upcoming fruit. With the most asparagus harvesting by June, apply nitrogen-thunder fertilizer for next year.
Your lawn should receive low-nitrogen-based fertilizer in June. Your roses should receive a phosphorus-based fertilizer treatment after their first bloom, which should now be about. All your trees and bushes should receive a summer fertilizer before July 4. Your garden center can help you find the right fertilizer, as not all plants should get the same – and the fertilizer is heavy, so you will do good to buy it locally, instead that it is sent to you.
Insect

Cabbage insect.
Credit: Amanda Blum
At this time of the year, garden pests are full terrorists. This morning I saw that many bean rope peeping through the soil were thwarted by slugs. Spray will not be the only solution at this point – you will need to manually remove pests from your plants. Aphids can be sprayed with water, but they will come back without treating soap water or nearby trap plants such as Nastartium. If you do not have nostartiums nearby, plant them now – Aphids will be more attracted to nastartium and will choose them instead. You simply leave Aphid-infected nastartium in place. Treatment such as sluggo can help reduce slug populations, but manual extraction is still necessary. Leave the shallow lid of beer or yeast bread starter around as a mesh, and assemble the slugs running it every day.
Each of your garden plant has several insects trying to feed it; A daily walk around your garden will help you notice what can be attacked on your plants. Get a butterfly net, and use it to catch and kill the white cabbage kites that swell about the garden.
Set sick plants

Diseced leaves on a cherry tree.
Credit: Amanda Blum
Gardens are susceptible to viruses and fungi; One of the best ways to stop them is to water the root of the plants, rather than overhead, which sprinkles on the ground, which waters the water back on the plants. As you see a blight or mosaic virus in your garden, you should cut it quickly, dispose those plants in garbage (not compost), and make sure you wash your hands and equipment before going to the next plant. If you see powder mildew on your plants, you can treat it with a thin vinegar spray. Now that you can catch a sign of infections such as leaf curls on your stone fruit trees, which can be treated, can be caught quite quickly with copper sprays. The fungicidal can lead to a long way to help prevent problems such as black spots on roses. You want to be very prudent when using fungi and copper sprays: these are most preventive remedies, not reactive. If you are asking what you see in your garden, take a picture and head to the center of the garden.
What do you think so far?
What to plant
Summer vegetables should all be in the ground by the end of June. Your tomatoes, brinjals, black Mitigation Anyway, like Agribon and planting in place. Agribon tenting will create a warm condition of your needs, and you can remove it when the temperature gets heated enough on its own.
Beans, cucumbers, corn, Adames, Brinjal, Melons, Okra, Summer Squash, and Sweet Sweetness should be applied this month. If this is quite early, they can still be directly seeded, but by mid -June, you should start instead.

Sweet peas.
Credit: Amanda Blum
You can still apply all your summer annual flowers, including zinias, cosmos, sunflowers, salvia and selezia, which begin with seeds. They are later ensured by planting in waves to many heirs of flowers in the season. Remember when these flowers are planted to check the seed label for heights, you can separate them.
Now that your spring flowers are dying, they have been properly dedicated. Your tulip only needs to beheaded, but no less – they do not need leaf in place to return next year. Iris stems can be cut on the ground, but in a Chevron, next year to ensure a good growth. If you are committed to religious harvesting of your sweet peas, you can make them well in summer. Each day, fresh blooms at the base of the stem, and you will see that the stems become small and small. Once the sweet pea goes to the seed and produces pods, it is time to get the flowers out of the ground and plant something else. Deadheading your Snapdragon will encourage the plants to the branch, more bloom, but as soon as the snaps go to the seed (flowers look like a skull), they should be cut on the ground, hoping that they may return next year.
Through June, the best course of action is to pass through the garden once a day, even if it is a quick. Every morning, I roam the garden, catch weeds as I find them. Pay attention to action items such as harvest you can, insects or pruning, and make sure to write and write in your garden magazine. This is why you put the garden: to enjoy it.