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Well, our long cool, wet desert spring (winter in most other places) has given way to warmer weather rather suddenly. There seems to be a very short time for warm up here in the low desert, one day it is cool and the next, we are looking to our cooling systems and pools. Our fruit trees have bloomed or are blooming and established plants and trees are in a flush of new growth. Established citrus has bloomed and will now be putting on little fruits. There will be some natural fruit drop later but careful attention to water and fertilizing will help give you a nice crop.
Also this month, finish pruning frost damaged plants and replace any that bit the dust. Plant citrus this month from containers. After planting, make a basin around the tree and water two or three times a week until well established. To protect trees from sunburn, wrap trunks in white cloth or newspapers, or apply a coat of white latex paint. Remember, citrus trees can be trimmed a bit when they are larger to keep them smaller for easier harvest of fruit. Watch out for those thorns, though! Now for those vegetable gardeners among us - this is a great time for getting your garden growing. In addition to the things you may have planted previously, beans and cucumbers should be sown by mid-April, and set out eggplant, okra, peanut, squash, and sweet potato anytime this month. Also fun to grow are gourds, luffa sponge, Armenian cucumbers (long, twisting, mild tasting) and yard long beans. Scarlet runner beans are also very attractive as well as edible. If you have young children, grow some on ‘teepees’ made of bamboo or PVC pipe or another structure for them to play in. They can have the fun of picking and eating them as well. Tomatoes and peppers can still be set out. When planting tomatoes, pull off the lower leaves, especially if they are wilted and yellow, and lay the plant down in a sloping trench. This puts most of the stem in warmed soil with the top sticking out. The plant will put out roots all along the stem and the tomato will grow an upright stem. Good news for everyone who loves hot peppers - they love the heat in the low desert! Grow all kinds including the old stand-by, Anaheim Chile. If given good care and plant where they will get sun in winter, you will get some peppers all year as they are perennial in the low desert. Go To Page: 1 2
The copyright of the article Gardening In The Low Desert April 2001 in Desert Gardening is owned by . Permission to republish Gardening In The Low Desert April 2001 in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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