Garden Year Our aim is to give you access to relevant and current information about our products and in the following pages you will find details of the entire Vitax portfolio.
Click on any of the catalogue links below for more detailed information on each of the Vitax ranges.
If your questions are not satisfactorily answered here, please contact Customer Services:
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Please select a month from the table below to see our hints & tips for that period.
October October is one of the loveliest and most colourful months of the year. Many flowers are still in bloom; the autumn-flowering bulbs such as colchicums and nerines are at their best and many shrubs and trees are covered with bright berries and coloured leaves. At the beginning of the month there is often an unusually fine spell of weather, with warm, clear sunny days, which shows both countryside and garden at their best.
Night frosts are normal, particularly at the end of the month, but the mornings are often bright and sunny so things that normally go unnoticed, such as spiders' webs, suddenly become objects of beauty in the autumn garden.
Jobs that won't wait Harvest fruit and vegetables. Apples and pears should be picked by the end of the month and maincrop carrots and potatoes should be lifted and stored for the winter.- Sow hardy annuals, sweet peas and lettuces to overwinter under glass. Sweet peas can also be sown direct in the ground in mild areas and protected with cloches.
- Plant spring-flowering hardy annuals and biennials as soon as possible.
- Plant all evergreens, including conifers, by the end of the month.
- Plant window boxes and hanging baskets for winter interest.
- Plant spring-flowering bulbs in the garden and in containers.
- Plant lilies for summer flowering.
- Plant garlic, spring cabbages and Japanese onions.
- Lift tender bulbs, corms and tubers, such as dahlias and gladioli. Treat with Vitax Yellow or Green Sulphur to prevent storage rots and store in frost-free place.
- Check bowls of bulbs planted for winter flowering indoors. Do not let them dry out.
- Put winter protection in place around vulnerable border perennials and shrubs in cold regions. In milder areas this can wait for another month.
- Bring in pelargoniums and half-hardy fuchsias growing in tubs and pots outdoors.
- Net the pool to protect it from autumn leaves.
- Prepare the garden for winter; clear fallen leaves and other debris, store garden equipment, clean the greenhouse and put insulation in place to conserve heat.
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