What to do with mail order plants that arrive early.
Mail order plant sellers try to guess when conditions are right to ship plants to your zone, but they sometimes guess wrong. If the plants are potted and leafed out you will have to find a sunny windowsill for them until the ground is thawed and the weather has warmed a bit. If they aren’t potted but are leafed out plant them in good potting soil and place in a sunny window.
Dormant plants that arrive when the ground is still snow covered and frozen are a bigger problem. Open the packages, remove any plastic, and keep any packing such as shredded paper or peat around the roots moist. If they don’t come with packing you can tear paper in strips and moisten it to wrap the roots. If they are potted and dormant keep the soil in the pot moist. Store them in a cool place. Do not sit them in a bucket of water. If you think that you will need to hold them for more than a week it is best to pot plants in good potting soil and sit them somewhere cool but freeze free. A garage or unheated porch may work. Don’t worry about light unless they begin to leaf out, then they will need good light. Plant dormant stock outside as soon as the soil thaws, they can take the cold, before they leaf out if possible.
Bulbs will generally keep in a dark cool place in the shipping material until you can plant them. Open up any plastic bags to vent excess moisture. Packaged, bare root roses will keep in the package in a cool, dark place for a couple weeks. Strawberries that arrive bare root and bundled in a bag can be wrapped in a moistened paper towel and stored in the crisper drawer of the refrigerator. Check them every day to make sure they are moist, but not moldy. If mold develops spread them out and let them dry slightly. Plant them outside as soon as possible. If you have concerns about holding plants call the garden store you purchased them from and ask for advice.
Before you know it April will be over and the garden season will be in full swing. The weather will hopefully be great and you will be ready to hit the ground planting. Here’s those links I promised.
USDA map with interactive features http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/
Starting seeds indoors http://www.examiner.com/article/tips-for-starting-seeds-indoors
Seed starting http://www.examiner.com/article/what-you-need-to-know-about-seed-starting-soil-or-medium
Lawn care http://www.examiner.com/article/april-lawn-care-for-michigan-gardeners
Smart planting tips http://www.examiner.com/article/smart-planting-tips-and-trick
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