Gardening Basics

New Year’s Resolutions for Gardeners

By Sarah Marcheschi

It’s time to talk about New Year’s resolutions for gardeners. Every year around this time I feel a familiar excitement. It may still be midwinter, with snow on the ground and bitter winds whipping around every corner, but inside, I’m poring over seed catalogs, admiring Pinterest boards overflowing with rose gardens and well-ordered veggie patches, and generally making a lot of grand plans that will, if we’re being honest, eventually come to naught.

It’s not that my intentions aren’t honorable. I really meant to get a jump on pulling all those weeds! And this will definitely be the year I remember to start my seeds indoors six weeks early. If you’re like me, you may need a way to harness your momentum. (Or need something to hold you accountable, as the case may be). Turning some of those promising ideas into New Year’s resolutions may be just the thing to keep us all motivated well past the first of January and start the year off right.

Clean and Prepare Tools

Cleaning and prepping my garden tools for the upcoming season is one task I’m guilty of skipping almost every year. Though I know my hardware is a valuable investment, I tend to neglect this chore in favor of more glamorous activities like choosing another variety of tomato or hanging up a new bird feeder. But this is the year to give these pieces the attention they are (desperately!) due. Tools can be cleaned with soap and water, or use a coarse metal brush to scrape away stubborn dirt. Use sandpaper on any parts that have started to rust, or to remove splinters from handles. Then, apply mineral spirits to help prevent the splintering that can sometimes occur.

Try Something New

Planting a new perennial or flowering shrub may seem like an obvious suggestion, but I’ve found it’s much easier to commit in theory than it is in practice. Reading magazines or looking at design books are great ways to get inspiration, but when it comes time to plant I tend to reach for the same reliable mainstays, again and again. Still, letting yourself have the freedom to make mistakes is part of the fun of gardening. Step away from the hostas for that shady spot and try something like pulmonaria or a heuchera. In your containers, try mixing in some herbs with the annuals. Or, plant something tropical, just for that summery splash of color. Remember there’s always a clean slate the next year if you try something that doesn’t work out.

Start Seeds

One of my favorite winter pastimes is curling up with a pot of tea and a stack of seed catalogs, the chillier the day is outside, the better. I mark off all the uncommon varieties I want to try in the coming season. I’ll daydream about the lush cutting garden and bounty of blooms I will have in just a few short months. And with all the money I’ll save by starting the seeds and transplanting them myself, I can certainly afford to add a few more packets to my cart! There’s still plenty of time to set up the lights, buy the growing medium … I’ll figure that out next week.

As the weeks pass, my to-do list turns into a second, and before I know it, I’m back at the garden center buying plants and plotting the best way to store my seeds for next year. Best of all, now that you have turned this into a New Year’s Resolution to keep you focused, this year will be different. Right?

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