Continue to deadhead most annuals and perennials and keep your beds watered. Remove faded blossoms from annuals to stimulate more flowers for late summer color, and from perennials to prevent reseeding.
All garden plants need water, but hanging baskets and container plantings are particularly susceptible to drought. Check the moisture level in containers often during summer months; containers may need watering two times a day when temperatures get into the eighties or nineties. Continue to turn hanging baskets 180º every few days to ensure fullness and uniform growth.
After the spring bloom your plants need a boost to bloom again or to go into their growing cycle. Use slow release fertilizer on permanent plantings and liquid fertilizer on annuals, pots, and hanging baskets. Don't fertilize perennials after mid-July, but allow plants to slow down and proceed with a buildup of needed reserves for winter.
Remove flower stalks from peonies and iris and prune roses after bloom. Stake other tall-growing perennials (dahlias and gladiolas) to prevent them from sagging once in bloom.
Once spring-flowering bulbs have matured and the foliage has turned brown, it is time to spade them up and thin out the stand. Crowded bulbs produce fewer and smaller blooms. They usually need thinning every 3 to 4 years.
Early detection is the key to controlling disease and insect pests (powdery mildew, black spot spores, earwigs, slugs, etc.). Carefully inspect your garden, note any problems, and check with Red's expert staff for recommended control measures.
Spireas that have pink flowers can be pruned to stimulate a second bloom in August and September. Do NOT shear white flowering spireas; they have different growth habits and won't rebloom.
If you've been pinching back your mums throughout the spring, mid-July is the last time to pinch. If you haven't been pinching your mums all spring, here's an easy care trick: cut them back by half in early July and fertilize. This will help them to grow bushier and delay bloom until later in the summer.