Urban Permaculture Design Melbourne

June in the Garden PDF Print E-mail

What to plant...

If you've recently bought a Fully Planted or Deluxe VEG Bed you can probably skip this section. But if you've a home vegie gardener, design client or have bought VEG Edging, read on... 

  • Vegies: It's truly cold now, but there's still hope for new plantings.  Don't expect them to move fast until spring, but you can plant cabbage, asian greens like mizuna, tatsoi or pak choi, lettuce, rocket, spinach, mustards, spring onions, leek, onions, radish and parsely.  Put some sweet peas in the ground and watch them climb.   

  • Winter bulbs and crowns: It's now time to buy asparagus and rhubarb crowns, and organic garlic cloves for a summer harvest. Consider Jerusalem artichokes, square metre for square metre the most productive energy crop for our climate (although some find the taste less good than potatoes.)  For our Melbourne customers, we recommend Ceres (www.ceres.org.au) and Bulleen Art and Garden nurseries (www.baag.com.au).

  • Green manures: Since nothing grows too fast anyway, you might consider planting a cover crop to dig in to the soil come spring time.  This time of year try broad bean (buy them in bulk as fava beans from Middle Eastern groceries), field pea, oats and wheat.


Fertilising, mulching and watering

  • Don't be fooled by the wet cloudy weather, we haven't had any real serious rainfall since early April. We're almost halfway through the year, and we've only just recorded 100mm (Melbourne's average is over 250mm by this time of year).

  • Nevertheless, there's no longer as much need to water, although your soil could use a recharge, so water less often but water long and deeply.  Watering now while it's raining lightly is actually a good time to do this!  If you're a customer with an automated tap timer, consider turning the tap off after rain, and turning it back on in dry spells.

  • With overcast winter weather upon us we can consider raking up mulch to expose the dark soil, allowing it to warm up under the day's sunshine.  However be sure to return it by mid spring.

  • There's generally not much need to fertilise at this time of year, as plants are growing slowly or dormant.


Pest control
It's not just the plants it's the pests that have slowed down too. If you've got any problems from aphids or caterpillars, consult last month's info here.