10 Essential Midwinter Garden Jobs

, written by Benedict Vanheems gb flag

Pruning fruit bushes

Yes, it’s wet. Yes, it’s windy. And yes, it’s bloomin’ cold! But d’you know what? The days are starting to get longer and I’m positively luxuriating in the full ten minutes of extra light we already have here since the darkest day of the year – I’ll take what I can get!

Make the most of gradually increasing daylight as you go about my top jobs for this month, with clever tips to put yourself in pole position for the new growing season…

Force Rhubarb

Let’s jump straight in by coaxing along an extra-early harvest of wonderfully warming rhubarb! You can persuade the pleasingly plump buds into early growth by simply covering them over to exclude light - a process called ‘forcing’ rhubarb.

Forcing rhubarb
Cover up rhubarb to force it to produce sweeter stems

Clear away any old leaves and weeds, then mulch the rhubarb crown with a blanket of well-rotted garden compost to help feed the plant as it stirs into life. You can buy special rhubarb forcers, which look really rather stunning, but any large container that excludes light will work. To help trap warmth and speed things along, you can wrap the outside of the pot with bubblewrap or secure in place a thick layer of straw.

Then it’s just a question of waiting for lovely pale, elongated stems to push up. Depending on the progress of winter, these should be ready to harvest within about two months. I find they taste much sweeter and are far more tender than those harvested more traditionally. Just the job for a lovely crumble!

Only force well-established rhubarb crowns which have the energy to cope with this treatment. I’d suggest only forcing the plant once every few years to give it plenty of time to recover. That’s a good reason to grow more than one rhubarb plant I reckon!

Chit Potatoes

Is there a more versatile vegetable than potatoes? Whether you rave about roasties, go mad for mash, or fancy your fries, there’s a spud for that! Order them right now, while there’s still plenty of choice.

Chitting potatoes
From late January you can begin chitting potatoes

I like to grow a mix of both early season and maincrop potatoes, which gives me the best of both worlds: lovely new potatoes for summer salads, then chunky spuds for storing well into winter. When choosing what to grow it’s well worth reading variety descriptions with a beady eye. As well as checking that varieties match up to what you want to use them for, seek out attributes such as scab resistance and resistance to blight.

Once you get your seed potatoes, pop them somewhere cool but bright to chit, which just means producing shoots ahead of planting. Short, stocky shoots will give an earlier harvest and get spring-planted spuds off to a flying start. Lay them out into trays or egg boxes, so that the ends with the most eyes (the little dimples from where shoots will sprout) face upwards.

Garden Planner
Make plans now so you know where and when crops will be growing

Make Garden Plans

Planning makes perfect! Careful garden planning is every bit as important as, say, menu planning or financial planning. By doing so you increase your chances of an embarrassment of riches!

Do you know what you’ll be growing where this coming growing season? There are lots of things to consider when planning your plot. For example: crop rotation, so that the same families of vegetables aren’t growing in the same area as last season; sunshine requirements, prioritising the sunniest spots for warm-season favourites; and, of course, making the most of the space you have, by mapping out when crops will be in the ground and when and where new planting opportunities will appear as the season moves on.

Preparing a bed
Prepare your beds to give the soil time to settle before planting in spring

Prepare New Garden Beds

It’s amazing how fast time can fly, so ditch the dawdling and finish prepping growing areas before it’s too late!

Now’s a great time to set up new growing areas, assuming your garden isn’t under lots of snow of course – otherwise, delay until conditions improve. Just mow lawn or weeds then lay cardboard on top of both the beds and surrounding paths with cardboard to suppress and eventually kill off the lawn and weeds beneath. You can use raised beds or just lay organic matter such as compost, well-rotted manure, potting compost (or a mixture) on the surface where you want the beds to be. Woodchips make a good path surface between the beds. By doing all this now, you’re giving everything time to settle down ahead of planting in spring.

Liming soil
Soil may need to be limed for cabbage family crops

Lime Soil for Brassicas

The acidity or alkalinity of a soil – or it’s pH – plays a big part in the success of what we grow in it. Most vegetables thrive in neutral to slightly acidic soil, but there’s one crop family that really can’t abide more acid soils.

Brassicas (that’s crops like cabbages, broccoli, and kale) thrive in mildly acidic to neutral soils with a pH between 6.5 and 7.0 And while they might just about grow in more acidic soils, they’ll be far more open to diseases like clubroot. It's worth testing soil pH well ahead of planting pH picky plants so you can adjust it to suit.

If your soil is very acidic the pH can be increased (made more alkaline) by sprinkling on garden lime or ground limestone, which is basically just calcium carbonate – kind of like taking an indigestion tablet to settle acid-burned stomach!

Check the packet instructions for exactly how much to add. Broadcast it evenly over the area now to give it a few months to work its way into the soil ready for planting time. Weigh out what you need for the area and apply on a still day, so it doesn’t blow away, then rake it in.

If you have wood ash from non-treated wood this can help to gradually increase the soil pH too.

Heavy snowfall on sheds
Knock heavy accumulations of snow off structures if it's safe to do so

Knock Off Heavy Snow

Will it snow, or won’t it? I hope so – I love tobogganing and a good covering of snow always brings out the child in me!

While snow might keep up away from our gardens, it’s not all bad. It helps insulate plants from the worst of the cold and, I guess, gives us gardeners a chance to rest up before the growing season kicks off – our plans are, quite literally, put on ice!

One job you can do outdoors is to shake off heavy snow from snap-prone trees and shrubs, or to stop it pushing down and splaying apart bushes. Greenhouses, cold frames and sometimes even tunnels can collapse under all that extra weight, so carefully brush or knock off the snow. If you live in a snowy area, then avoid piling up snow on top of vulnerable plants so you’re not burying them for weeks on end.

Hand pruners
Give your pruning tools and clean, sharpen and service

Sharpen Pruners

This is a great time to clean and sharpen your tools, including those always-at-your-side hand pruners. Where would we be without them?

Bring them back into shape by loosening then cleaning off any dried-on sap and other gunk. You can loosen it with a light spray of oil, then work off the grime with a scouring pad or some wire wool. And once you’re done, wipe clean and leave it with its blade open to dry. If the tool has replaceable parts it can be completely dismantled to give it a really good clean and oil. Use this as an opportunity to check for any worn-out components that need replacing.

Next, sharpen the angled side of the blade only using a whetstone. Pass the whetstone across the blade at the same angle as the cutting edge, each stroke moving away from you to get that nice sharp edge back. And then to finish, run the whetstone along the flat side of the blade to remove any burrs. Finally, tighten up any loose parts and oil the central pivot point to help everything move smoothly once again. Job done!

Pruning redcurrants
Winter pruning helps keep fruit bushes healthy and productive

Prune Fruit Bushes

What better way to ease in your good-as-new pruners than a spot of fruit pruning? Currants and gooseberries benefit from a winter prune.

The first step with is to cut out the three Ds: branches that are obviously dead, badly diseased or damaged, plus any that are crossing other branches or causing congestion by just getting in the way – you need good airflow in the branchwork of your fruits to reduce the risk of disease and help fruits ripen.

With blackcurrants, a great way to encourage fresh, vigorous and – crucially – productive growth is to prune out up to a third of the oldest branches by cutting them right down to the ground, which will encourage new stems to push up from the base. You can tell which are the oldest by the darker stem colour.

To prune gooseberries, cut off the lowest-hanging branches, which tend to sag right down to onto the soil when overloaded with fruit. This will keep everything up off the ground and nice and clean. Next, cut away a few of the oldest branches to open out the center of the bush.

Ben with a broken cold frame
Fix anything that's damaged or becoming loose so they're fit to use in spring

Make Repairs to Garden Structures

Do you have a gaping hole in your greenhouse? Or is your cold frame looking worse for wear? Or maybe you have damaged walls, broken fences, or poorly fitting gates. If so, get on and fix things now while things are still quiet in the garden. Tighten up screws, replace damaged windows and get everything shipshape and beautifully functional once more.

Repairs made in winter will stand you in good stead when spring comes so you can make the very most of these invaluable gardening assets.

Sowing peas in guttering
Sow peas into guttering then simply slide them out into a waiting trench in spring

Sow Beans and Peas

If you didn’t get a chance to sow hardy peas and fava beans back in the autumn, then you’re in luck because towards the end of this month is another opportunity to do so.

Sowing these vegetable garden favourites is always a bit of a guessing game – if you sow too early or there’s an unusually mild spell the seedlings can get away a little too quickly and become gangly and prone to damage. A second sowing is very worthwhile if this happens.

Pop bean seeds into large-sized plugs of potting mix. Peas can be sown into plugs, or into lengths of guttering – just pop the seeds an inch or two apart randomly across potting mix, then cover them over. Grow them on and carefully slide them out of the gutter into waiting trenches come spring. Nice and easy!

< All Guides

Garden Planning Apps

If you need help designing your vegetable garden, try our Vegetable Garden Planner.
Garden Planning Apps and Software

Vegetable Garden Pest Warnings

Want to Receive Alerts When Pests are Heading Your Way?

If you've seen any pests or beneficial insects in your garden in the past few days please report them to The Big Bug Hunt and help create a warning system to alert you when bugs are heading your way.

Show Comments



Comments

 

Add a Comment

Add your own thoughts on the subject of this article:
(If you have difficulty using this form, please use our Contact Form to send us your comment, along with the title of this article.)



(We won't display this on the website or use it for marketing)



Captcha


(Please enter the code above to help prevent spam on this article)



By clicking 'Add Comment' you agree to our Terms and Conditions