Your Home and Garden

The constant gardener

Garden diary

Clear spent crops from the vegetable bed and compost. Or cut them down, chop up the thicker stalks, and leave on the top of the soil to break down over winter. Tomatoes, however, should be removed as they can harbour diseases that may over-winter in the soil.

Keep your household in nutrient-rich greens all winter long by sowing or planting silverbeet and/or spinach. Or sow fast-growing Asian brassicas such as bok choy, which takes a mere 55 days from seed to plate.

Many plants will enjoy a head-start on spring by being sown in the garden now. This gives them time to get established before winter, meaning stronger plants and earlier blooms in spring. Prominent in this group are broad beans, which

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Your Home and Garden

Your Home and Garden1 min read
Shop Their Style
1 Ombre Home macrame chair, $41, from Spotlight. 2 Sherry abstract tribal rug, $499, from Miss Amara. 3 Koni matte pendant, $99, from Lighting Plus. 4 Celadon jar, $79, from Early Settler. 5 Kas Prowl cushion, $20, from Briscoes. 6 Resene Tropical
Your Home and Garden1 min read
Shopping
Forget about matchy-matchy this season, mix it up with something like this pink, green and patterned bedding for a cool and eclectic vibe instead. Pink duvet cover set, from $69.99; patterned duvet set, from $89.99; and quilted bedspread, $129, from
Your Home and Garden1 min read
Line of Sight
Bunny tails, money plant, statice and native craspedia are all perfect for dried floral displays. • A length of timber. I used clear pine but you could use a piece of driftwood or a salvaged piece of timber. If you’re buying from a hardware store, as

Related Books & Audiobooks