Put your roses on a regular diet with monthly feeding (plus snacks)
Take care of the plants (and soil) until the weather cooperates
Master gardeners host Saturday sales in Woodland – plus an online garden chat
Capital City group hosts annual event including display of prized plants
Pacific Horticulture's 'Design Futurist Award' to honor gardens and designers that make a difference
This light dessert requires minimal stove time
Sacramento gardening forecast for March 26: Frost, rain and sun
At day-long free event, experts offer advice to inspire spring gardening
Saturday class, presentations focus on vegetable gardening
Free workshop offers advice on fire-wise landscaping renovations
Show and sale features Sacramento Valley's best outdoor orchids
Cold, rainy conditions in forecast for Sacramento
Greatest hits recipe: Ricotta cheese, phyllo part of a perfect brunch dish
Expect a soggy end to winter and start of spring
Expect spring to get off to a soggy start, weather service says
Visit a garden of natives as the green season gets going
Award-winning garden writer, author helped solve backyard mysteries
New Roseville nursery and garden store will be packed with activities March 18
Sacramento Perennial Plant Club hosts vendors and 'The Plant Lady' on Saturday
Triple-orange sugar cookies with or without orange glaze
Sacramento Digs Gardening to your inbox.
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Garden Checklist for week of Oct. 20
* October is the best month to plant trees, shrubs and perennials. Add a little well-aged compost and bone meal to the planting hole, but hold off on other fertilizers until spring. Keep the transplants well-watered (but not wet) for the first month as they become settled.
* Dig up corms and tubers of gladioli, dahlias and tuberous begonias after the foliage dies. Clean and store in a cool, dry place.
* Treat azaleas, gardenias and camellias with chelated iron if leaves are yellowing between the veins.
* Clean up the summer vegetable garden and compost disease-free foliage.
* Harvest apples and pears. Pick up fallen fruit.
* Harvest pumpkins and winter squash.
* Now is the time to plant seeds for many flowers directly into the garden, including cornflower, nasturtium, nigella, poppy, portulaca, sweet pea and stock.
* Plant seeds for radishes, bok choy, mustard, spinach and peas.
* Plant garlic and onions.
* Set out cool-weather bedding plants, including calendula, pansy, snapdragon, primrose and viola.
* Reseed and feed the lawn. Work on bare spots.