Find out what to do in the garden this May with top tips from The Micro Gardener and Living Smart

Each month Anne Gibson, The Micro Gardener shares gardening tips for our Sunshine Coast climate on Council’s  Living Smart website. Head there to read the full article, and for info, events and guides to help you on your sustainability journey. 

Top tips and tasks for Maywoman adding shredded paper to compostprune woody perennials, lemongrass and bushy shrubs. make compost and feed up your worm farmtop-up of container gardens with fresh potting mix before new plantings dry any herb or vegetable seeds from your garden to save the seeds fertilise your fruit trees, especially citrus. Weed and mulch around fruit trees at the same time. give flowering stone fruit a liquid feedtop up your mulch layerharvest any basil for pesto before it dies back and
collect the seeds for savingcut back arrowroot and perennialskeep
garlic
, potatoes and asparagus well weeded – they hate competitionhand saving seeds from seed headHarvestpumpkins and sweet potatoes are starchy tummy-filling vegetables that should be ready to harvestpassionfruit vines should be producing well along with citrus fruits.  Plantperpetual spinach, chard, silverbeet, Asian greens like tatsoi, celery, lettuce, coriander and rocketasparagus crowns, beans, all brassicas (broccoli, kale,
rocket
, cauliflower, cabbages), broad beans, capsicum, carrots, chia, cool season green manures, cucumber, eggplant,
garlic
, leek,
peas
, potato, radish,
spring onions
, sweet potato and tomatoesIf you are impatient for
peas and beans
, sow dwarf/bush varieties first, then climbers. strawberry runnersFruitstry planting fruit trees such as Citrus, Black Sapote, Carambola, Coffee, Feijoa, Fig, Finger lime, Guava, Kiwifruit, Macadamia, Mango, Mulberry, Olive, Passionfruit, Pawpaw, Peach, Pecan, Persimmon, Pomegranate and Strawberry runnersremove any buds from young fruit trees so they can put energy into growing roots, not fruitif your ‘mother’ strawberry plants are throwing runners, separate them and feed up well with compost and liquid seaweed to boost new root and shoot growth. woman getting ready to plant Herbs and flowers

Some herbs hate the heat – take annual Coriander and Dill for example. However, they thrive at this time of year and will produce hundreds of free seeds for microgreens and next season when they finish later in the year. 

sow Borage, Chervil, Comfrey roots, Fennel, Lemongrass, Parsley, Pineapple Sage (easy from cuttings) and Sorrelplant your bulbs and flowers, including Calendula, Cornflower, Daylily, Dianthus, Marigold, Nasturtium, Pansy, Poppy, Snapdragon, Sweet Pea and Violainterplant your herbs and flowers between vegetables (particularly brassicas) to attract beneficial predator insects to keep caterpillars and other insects in balance.Find out more

Anne Gibson is The Micro Gardener. For more detailed info, you can follow Anne on her Website, Facebook, Substack, Instagram, X,  YouTube or Pinterest

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