Provided is a list of tasks you must perform in your garden during July. Please understand your gardening zone which is identified in the menu above. Look for Hardiness Zones.
Zone 1
- Reap herbs for maximum flavor by harvesting them as the first flower buds appear
 - Lanky annuals need your help! Pinch them back now to encourage bushy growth and more flowers.
 - Don’t forget watering chores: potted plants, especially, dry out quickly in warm weather
 - Set out warm season vegetables and annuals
 - Harvest veggies as soon as they’re ripe to encourage further production
 - Avoid weed-infested gardens: weed before you leave on vacation
 - Mulching around trees prevents mower damage and weed whacker blight
 - The best time to cut flowers for vases? Early in the day when stems are firm and water filled.
 - Maintain a thick layer (3 to 4 inches) of mulch on flower and vegetable gardens. It conserves moisture, reduces weeds, and adds organic matter to the soil.
 - Deadhead the faded roses you haven’t cut by taking off the spent flower stems down to a five-leaflet leaf
 
Zone 2
- Create your own gardener’s gold! Start a compost pile.
 - Now that temperatures have warmed, plant summer-flowering bulbs and tubers
 - Sow biennial seeds (hollyhocks, English daisies, foxgloves, violas, Canterbury bells, and sweet William) for flowers next year
 - Tall flowers, such as lupines and foxgloves, need staked support against the wind
 - To maintain freshness, cool fruits and veggies(except tomatoes) as quickly as possible after harvest
 - Relax — there’s no need to fertilize the lawn in midsummer
 - Harvest veggies regularly; avoid rotting produce that attracts insects and reduces yields
 - Cut stems of annual herbs just above a pair of leaves, allowing 4 to 6 inches of plant to remain for regrowth and additional harvest
 - Leave the larvae on dill and carrots for beautiful fall butterflies
 - Note the native plants in bloom this month and include them in your own wildflower garden
 
Zone 3
- Now’s the time to start seeds of cool-season vegetables for fall growing
 - Rogue out (remove) virus-infected plants from the garden and control leaf-hopping insects to prevent virus spread
 - By pruning off faded blooms from annuals, you can prevent seed formation and coax additional flowers
 - Mulch flowerbeds with dried grass clipping or compost to maintain moisture and reduce weeds
 - Save maintenance and water by allowing perennial rye and Kentucky blue grass lawns to go dormant during the summer
 - Raspberries are ripe when they pull readily from the central core
 - Prune water sprouts (upright, vigorous shoots)from apple trees
 - Avoid deep cultivation around shallow rooted trees and shrubs such as evergreens
 - Add a water-soluble fertilizer to hanging baskets and patio pots every 2 weeks to keep plants blooming their best
 - Cut flowers for drying at their prime or when just opening
 
Zone 4
- Add one last planting of gladioli bulbs for flowers into fall
 - Harvest veggies as soon as they’re ripe to encourage further production
 - Avoid the sight of a weed-infested garden: weed first before you leave on vacation
 - Harvest sweet corn when silks are brown and punctured kernels produce a milky juice
 - Prevent blossom-end rot on tomatoes by providing plants with at least an inch of water each week
 - Let melons ripen on the vine–this is where they will develop their best flavor
 - Start fall garden transplants from seed
 - Petunias, coleus and other summer annuals might be leggy by now. Pinch them back just above a leaf to encourage bushy growth and more flowers
 - Leave faded flowers on those plants that form ornamental seed heads, pods, or berries
 - Provide water in a shallow pan or birdbath for your feathered and fluttering friends
 
Zone 5
- Remove annuals with stunted or unusual color; these are usually virus infected and the disease can spread to neighboring healthy plants
 - To control disease on fruit trees, maintain a summer spray schedule
 - Clean hummingbird feeders filled with nectar solution regularly to ward off mold and bacteria
 - Consider drip irrigation and/or soaker hoses for watering in the flowerbed and vegetable garden
 - Bats help control mosquitoes; attract these friendly mammals with bat houses
 - Muskmelons and cantaloupes are ready for picking when the stem “slips” easily from the fruit with gentle pressure
 - Harvest veggies as soon as they’re ripe to encourage additional production
 - Sharp mower blades prevent leaf blade damage and lawn stress
 - Prevent diseases on susceptible rose varieties: apply fungicide every 7-10 days
 - Lanky annuals need your help! Pinch them back now to encourage bushy growth and more flowers
 
Zone 6
- Deadhead blooming annuals and perennials for repeat flowering
 - Harvest veggies immediately when ripe; rotting produce attracts insects
 - Avoid weed-infested gardens: weed before you leave on vacation
 - Water hanging baskets and patio pots daily during warm weather
 - Fertilize annual flowerbeds with an all-purpose fertilizer to encourage more blooms
 - Harvest lavender stems for use in bath sachets or drying
 - Sharp shears make quick work of herb and flower harvests
 - Mow cool season grasses at 3 inches during the summer to shade and insulate the soil
 - Enjoy a glass of tea flavored with mint, pineapple sage, or lemon balm from the garden
 - Provide birds and butterflies with a shallow water source
 
Zone 7
- Remove faded flowers from perennials after they finish blooming. Deadheading redirects energy towards healthy roots.
 - Maintain a 3 to 4 inch mulch layer around trees and shrubs to protect them from mower and weed whacker damage.
 - Check plants regularly for insect problems; hand pick or use suitable control measures if found
 - Fertilize warm-season grasses
 - Plant butterfly nectar and larval food plants such as asclepias, buddleia, and passionflower
 - Replace spent annuals with heat-tolerant lantana, verbena, pentas, and hibiscus
 - Consider drip irrigation and/or soaker hoses as efficient watering alternatives
 - Harvest raspberries and blackberries daily to avoid attracting insects to overripe fruit
 - Prune water sprouts from apple trees
 - Water flowerbeds and vegetable gardens deeply.This encourages a deep root system
 
Zone 8
- Start basil seedlings for a fall herb garden
 - Mow warm-season grasses at a height of 2.5to 3 inches; apply at least an inch of water a week
 - Prevent rose diseases with a fungicide spray program
 - For longest vase life, harvest cut flowers just as they begin to open and condition them in floral preservative
 - Fertilize container plants every two weeks with a water-soluble fertilizer solution for best bloom
 - Keep annuals in bloom by removing faded flowers
 - Bats help control mosquitoes; attract these friendly mammals with bat houses
 - Help trees survive the heat by mulching heavily over the root system–avoid mulch too close to the trunk
 - Water your garden more efficiently with drip irrigation or soaker hoses
 - Save space in the garden with trellises, fences, and stakes-harvest is easier too
 
Zone 9
- Cultivate your own tropical paradise going by planting palms, bananas, and fruit trees
 - Start tomato transplants for your fall vegetable garden
 - A sunny yellow garden of cosmos, sunflowers, and zinnias brightens up the summer landscape
 - Mow warm-season grasses at a height of 2.5to 3 inches; apply at least an inch of water weekly
 - Inspect plants for possible insect pest problems
 - Attract butterflies to the garden by providing caterpillar food plants like carrots, dill, and parsley
 - Beat the heat with durable annuals like zinnia, sunflower, and celosia
 - Hibiscus makes a great addition to hanging baskets, patio pots, or flowerbeds
 - Clean hummingbird feeders regularly to prevent mold and bacteria growth
 - Get the most from garden space by installing trellises and stakes for plants to grow up on–harvest is easier too
 
Zone 10
- Start tomato seedlings for your fall garden; consider container varieties for your patio
 - Remove dying foliage regularly from water garden to maintain a healthy pond pH
 - Water gardens and yards early in the morning before the wind comes up; apply at least an inch of water weekly
 - Remove grass from around trees and shrubs and replace with moisture-conserving mulch
 - To build up delicious nutmeats, thoroughly water nut trees
 - A mixture of flower colors, sizes and bloom times provides butterfly nectar throughout the season
 - Plant a variety of basil flavors for a fall herb garden
 - Check the filter in your water garden for clogs
 - Install drip irrigation in the vegetable garden and flowerbeds to water more efficiently
 - Plant morning glory vines to provide nectar for hummingbirds
 
Zone 11
- Gasping fish at the water garden’s surface need additional oxygen from cleaner water
 - Inspect plants regularly for potential pest problems
 - Fertilize container plants every 2 weeks with a water-soluble fertilizer for best bloom
 - A mixture of flower colors, sizes, and bloom times will attract butterflies throughout the season
 - Remove grass from the area directly around trees and shrubs and replace with moisture conserving mulch
 - Keep an eye on the water garden during hot spells and provide additional aeration and/or mist the water to help cool it
 - Hummingbirds love shrimp plants, four o’clock, and morning glories; include these in your garden and you’re sure to have regular visitors
 - Water gardens and yards early in the morning before wind levels increase
 - The best time to cut flowers for vases? Early in the day when stems are firm and water filled.
 - Lawns should be cut at 2 1/2 to 3 inches; mow frequently enough to remove only 1/3 of the leaf surface at any one time
 

