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Soil Temperatures

 

    Nebraska's Soil Temperatures

 

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November | 2009

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
 1 Shovel 
 2 Pencil
3 Houseplants

 

 4
 5 Mower
 6
7 Rabbit
 
8  
9 AxeEvergreen 
10  
11  
12 Houseplant 
13 Peach 
14  
15  
16
 
17  
18
 
19 Sprayer 
20
 
21
 
22 LilyRose 
23  
24 Winter watering 
25  
26  
27  
28 Strawberry 
29  
30  
   
   
   
   
   

November Garden Activities:

1- Plow or spade gardens.

2- Order garden catalogues.

3- Inspect houseplants for the presence of insect pests. If necessary treat with a house plant insecticide spray.

4-

5- Prepare your lawn mower, and other landscape equipment with small engines, for winter storage by changing the oil and filter.   Inspect and change the spark plug if necessary. Sharpen the mower blade.  Clean and sharpen other garden tools.

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7- Protect fruit trees from rabbit and vole injury.

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9- Cut down and burn, chip or bury pine trees suspected to have been killed by pine wilt before May 1.

10-

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12- Some members of the African violet family become dormant in winter, e.g. Sinningias or Streptocarpus (Dauphin Violet). Reduce frequency of watering and don’t fertilize. For a cool indoor area, choose the pocketbook plant or Cineraria.

13- Apply dormant fungicide application to peach trees for peach leaf curl now or in March.

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19- Clean garden sprayers.  Store liquid herbicides & insecticides in a frost-free area.

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22- Apply winter mulches to non-hardy perennials and roses.

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24- Monitor weekly precipitation, whether snow or rain, and water during dry periods when the soil is not frozen.  Winter droughts need treatment with water just as summer droughts do.  Deeply water trees with a slowly running sprinkler left in place long enough to moisten the top 12 inches of soil.  Do not use 'root feeders' or deep root watering devices. Apply the water slowly enough that it can soak in and does not run off.

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28- Apply a layer of loose, organic mulch on strawberry plantings, to a depth of four inches, in late November or early December after the soil has frozen to a depth of 1/2 inch, or the temperature has dropped to the 20s for three consecutive days.  Do not apply the mulch too early in the fall as it can delay hardening off, making plants more susceptible to winter injury, and increasing crown rot. Suitable mulches include wood chips, pine straw, newspapers, coarse sawdust, straw, clean hay or any loose mulch that will not compact heavily.

29-

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Calendar Symbol Key

Apple  Apple

Broadleaf plantsTree 

Bulbs  Bulbs

Cherry  Cherry

Evergreen plants Evergreen Tree 

Garden cleanupRake

Garden Prep Shovel

Grapes Grapes

Herbs  Herb

Household Insects House

HouseplantsViolet

Insect controlBeetle

Iris Iris

Lawn care Grass

Lawn applications Fertilizer bags

MowingMower

Onions Onion

Peach Peach

Pear Pear

Perennials Lily

Pesticide applications  Sprayer

Pets Pet

Planting Trowel

Plum  Plum

Poinsettia Poinsettia

PruningPruners

RaspberriesRaspberry

RecordkeepingPencil

Roses Rose

StrawberriesStrawberry 

Vegetables  Tomato 

WateringHose

Weed controlDandelion

Wildlife Rabbit