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how does your garden grow

The garden is most beautiful in June, and also completely out of control: the plants, both annual and perennial, grow their foliage with great enthusiasm, trying to cover as much turf as possible before the competition gets to it.

The perplexed gardener has to stare in disbelief at formerly barren flower borders now turned into an impenetrable jungle.

For instance, if I were to drop a trowel on top of my stuffed daylily border, it wouldn’t reach the ground.
You say overcrowding, I say life thriving. They weren’t overcrowded when I planted them.

Their unruly stalks start growing sideways after a while, like a tufted cushion with a ripped seam, spilling flowers and leaves into the garden path and trying to cover as much square footage as the length of their aerial parts allows.

What is one to do with such a mess? Enjoy it, it won’t last the whole summer. After the early summer bloom fades, the plants shed a lot of the excess foliage and just coast until the end of the season.

For now the weeds are the principal problem (that’s where the overcrowding comes in handy: good luck finding a spot, fiends!), so be meticulous about removing them before they set seed.

Water if the weather is dry, deadhead the spent flower heads from the previous season to keep the garden healthy and pretty, and feed perennials before their blooming season starts, they consume a lot of energy to produce flowers.

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