By Gary Crispell, North Carolina Extension Master GardenerSM volunteer of Durham County
To paraphrase a Hallmark card, or maybe it was a Lexus commercial, this was a December best forgotten. Cold, dry (for the third month in a row), and complicated by a household with major orthopedic issues. Here’s hoping 2026 is kinder.
The Accidental Cottage Garden is sleeping now (with all the stems left intact, of course). If either my mother or her mother were still around, the former would be worried and the latter downright apoplectic. Times change, and so do gardening practices. That said, I will need to trim a few plants that are intruding onto the sidewalk. My apologies in advance to the insects affected.
January is a bleak month in the garden. There isn’t much that should be done, and even less that’s pleasant to do given the weather. I may choose to stay indoors with a stack of gardening books and the occasional escapist novel. ( One does need a break now and then.)
Here’s your January garden to-do list. Try not to do it all in one day.
LAWN CARE:
Keep accumulated leaves off turf areas. Most leaves should be finished falling by now, which makes the job easier. Use them as mulch in garden beds – do not send them to the landfill.
While you’re at it, think about whether you could reduce, or eliminate, some of your lawn. Grass is often the most expensive planting in the yard (unless you’re growing a serious collection of tea roses) and one of the least ecologically sustainable. Just saying.
FERTILIZING:
There’s not much to do this month unless you’re looking for a place to use wood ashes. They can be spread on vegetable gardens, bulb beds, or non–acid-loving shrubs if your soil pH is low (below 6.0).
PLANTING:
Asparagus crowns can be planted now. Trees and shrubs can also be planted or transplanted. Remember: even in cold weather and without leaves, plants still need water.


Left to right: Asparagus can grown from one-year-old roots, called crowns. Crowns grow vertically and horizontally. This is an example of ‘Purple Passion’ asparagus crowns. (Image credit: NC Cooperative Extension (osiristhe CC BY-ND-2.0). Tender young asparagus shoots coming out of the ground (Image credit: twoellis/Bigstock.com)
PRUNING:
Sharpen your hand pruners and loppers and get to work. This is a perfect legitimate excuse to get out of the house. Studies show that pruning cuts made in January often heal more quickly than those made later in the year.
Remove branches that overhang the house, shade key areas of the garden, or are misshapen or overgrown. Prune branches individually to shape the plant. Unless you’re trying to recreate Buckingham Palace, Versailles, or the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, leave the power hedge clippers in the garage. Shearing is rarely the best option.
If you must shear, be sure the finished plant is wider at the base than at the top. This allows sunlight to reach the lower leaves and keeps the plant full from top to bottom.
When removing entire branches, make cuts just outside the branch collar – the flared area where the branch meets the trunk.
Branch collar shown at white arrows on a sycamore. Branch bark ridge shown at yellow arrows. Gold arrows show correct angle of cut along the dashed red lines. (Image from: NC State Extention Publications. )
SPRAYING:
Did some uninvited guests come indoors with your houseplants this fall? You’re not alone. On a warm day, take plants outside for a light application of horticultural oil or insecticidal soap. And yes – read the label.


A Mealybug nymph and a Mealybug extended family or potential “Lessees” on your houseplants.
(Image credit: US National Collection of Scale Insects Photographs Archive, USDA ARS, http://www.insectimages.org and https://www.flickr.com/photos/scotnelson/)
HINTS FOR STAYING WARM AND DRY UNTIL MARCH:
Dress in layers when you go outside, because you will go outside. You’re a gardener.
Seed catalogs are excellent winter reading. One favorite is Southern Seed Exchange; if it grows in the South, they probably carry it (including, paradoxically, seedless watermelon).
Install a squirrel-resistant bird feeder (note: “squirrel-proof” is an oxymoron).
Search online for North Carolina native plants and consider adding something new to your landscape. Start planning what you want to buy at our annual plant sale which will be on April 11, 2026 this year. And for more inspiration come to our Plant Festival on March 28th 2026. You will learn so much about particular plants, community partners, and we give away free plants!
Make soup from garden produce you preserved earlier in the year and enjoy warm beverages.
Stay warm. March is only two months away.
Additional Resources and Information
- Using wood ash in the garden: UGA Cooperative extension. //site.extension.uga.edu/fannin-gilmer/2020/12/using-wood-ash-in-the-garden/
- More on growing Asparagus from NCSU: https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/asparagus
- Find whatever plant you want on the NCSU Plant Tool Box: https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/
- Winter is the time for pruning, Northern Virgina Master Gardener’s bulletin: https://mgnv.org/public-education/winter-is-the-time-for-pruning/
- General Pruning techniques: Pruning Trees and Shrubs: NCSU: https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/general-pruning-techniques
- Provide Nesting Habitat for Native Bees Through Plant Stems in Your Garden: By NC Extension Agent of Chatham County, Debbie Roos: //growingsmallfarms.ces.ncsu.edu/2025/02/provide-nesting-habitat-for-native-bees-through-plant-stems-in-your-garden/
- Nesting and Overwintering Habitat for Pollinators and Other Beneficial Insects from Xerces Foundation: https://xerces.org/sites/default/files/publications/18-014.pdf
- Garden Cleanup for Pollinators: Trim Perennial Stems in Their First Winter: NCSU Publication: //content.ces.ncsu.edu/garden-cleanup-for-pollinators-trim-perennial-stems-in-their-first-winter
- Identification of the bees of North Carolina: https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/the-bees-of-north-carolina-identification-guide
Edited by Marcia Kirinus, NC State Extension Master GardenerSM volunteer of Durham County










