Planning ahead
Forward planning is an essential — yet often overlooked — part of successful, year round, gardening and this month is the perfect time to plan out, and make a start on, what you envisage on your own personal patch over the months, even years, to come.
While many of you may not be in an active gardening frame of mind — yes it is hot and humid during these monsoon weeks but whatever rain falls, in moderate amounts, is greatly needed by the land and by the underground water aquifers on which, ultimately, we all depend. July is the month in which to review your garden, decide on revamping plans, order seeds for autumn / winter sowing (unless they can be locally sourced, of course) and in which to either plant container / pot-grown shrubs / trees or to begin to decide what trees / shrubs you are going to put in this winter and to set aside their designated planting areas.
Let’s begin with reviewing your garden: start off by spending some time out in your garden, seriously considering every single thing in it, whether things / plants are being used / producing as intended, whether everything is absolutely perfect or if improvements are needed.
July is the perfect time to reimagine and plan your garden before the arrival of monsoon
If you realise that your garden ‘dream’ is not as originally intended then, unless you are perfectly happy with the accidental result as it is, close your eyes and re-imagine your dream garden all over again and then, get to work with redesigning both visible and invisible mistakes. The ‘invisible’ mistakes being important issues such as soil quality, drainage and water related issues such as ease of irrigation.
Recreating an existing garden does not, necessarily, mean bulldozing everything and beginning over with a clean, new slate. It is far easier, indeed preferable, to retain and design around established features like trees, shrubs, surfaced footpaths and so on but, as always, I strongly recommend giving serious consideration to whether or not you really need an expensive to maintain, water-guzzling, labour-intensive, rarely used, lawn. Lawns are not traditional in Pakistan but were, basically, made popular during the days of the British Raj when the population was small and water resources were correspondingly vast. These days, with water shortages increasing by the day, designing a garden that uses as little of this precious commodity as possible makes sense.