Winterfy your garden

Winterfy your garden
Handyman magazine

Winter can be hard going for plants, where heavy rain can saturate the soil and cause root rot, and prolonged periods of early morning frost can damage delicate leaves – yet it’s important to maintain gardens over winter so you’re not faced with a jungle in spring, when nature jumps back to life.

“The onset of the cooler weather means that plant growth slows dramatically and has to tolerate not just the cold conditions, but also reduced daylight hours and often increased overshadowing,” says Melissa. “During this time, lawns and gardens use up their stored energy reserves, making them more susceptible to diseases and weed invasion.”

Here, Melissa shares her top tips and favourite garden tools to maintain the garden in winter and give it the best possible start to spring.

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Prune to promote growth

Prune to promote growth
Cyclone

Winter is the perfect time to get stuck into pruning to promote healthy plant growth and an abundance of blooms next season. As a general rule, don’t cut more than a third off a plant, and cut off roughly half of the growth in a neat, rounded shape.

You might like to prune to an outward facing bud, so the branches grow in a vase-like shape.

If you live in a frosty area, it’s often a good idea to wait until the risk of frost is over before pruning, so new shoots don’t get damaged – particularly for roses.

Pictured above is a Cyclone Heavy Duty Bypass Pruner, with soft, comfortable over-mould handles for extra control when pruning. These are great for pruning live and green wood, but for more difficult branches that require extra reach and cutting power, try a Cyclone Bypass Ratchet Lopper with Telescopic Handles, which has a specialist ratchet-cutting mechanism to help reduce fatigue.

Clear the clutter

Clear the clutter
Cyclone

Old, spindly or dead wood also needs to be cut away. For heavy duty logs and branches that can go on the winter woodpile ready for the fire pit or indoor wood heater, Cyclone’s Supersplitter axe is ideally weighted and the perfect tool for splitting timber.

Think colour and fragrance

Think colour and fragrance
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We appreciate fragrant blooms in our gardens all the more in winter, so why not indulge your sense and plant perfumed beauties like Wintersweet (Chimonanthus praecox), with exquisitely scented starry flowers near the garden gate – or grow a hedge of Sweet Osmanthus (Osmanthus fragrans), whose flowers have an intoxicating scent, along a path or walkway.

Winter is the perfect time to give your garden a colour makeover, so why not liven outdoor rooms with exuberant bedding plants like Pansies, Violas, Cinerarias or Polyanthus.

Break out the rake

Break out the rake
Cyclone

If your garden is very green then chances are you’ll spend a lot time raking up leaves. “It’s important to remove fallen leaves from the lawn as soon as possible as leaves can become wet from rain and morning dew, stick together, and form a thick layer that will suffocate the grass and breed fungal diseases,” says Melissa. “These leaves can also be composted.”

Cyclone’s Super Rake is multi-purpose and suitable for raking leaves, sand and lawn clippings on grass, broad paths, gravel and paved areas as well as doubling as a scraper for levelling sand or topsoil.

Investing in the garden and lawn can add more than just value to your home. Gardening is good for the mind and staying active can help reduce stress and anxiety levels. Spending a few hours to spruce up the garden will create an outdoor space that is both bursting with life and a sanctuary for relaxation. Happy gardening!