To Do in the Garden: June 2026

By Gary Crispell, NC State Extension Master Gardener SM volunteer of Durham County

Summer must have started because Memorial Day has come and gone.  Today is July-like — humid, rather warm, and breezy. (This informational tome of wisdom and snarkiness is still human generated, which means a deadline exists prior to the first of the month — hence the less-than-timely observation.)  It is threatening to rain, but the credibility of the threat is nonexistent.

Meanwhile the Accidental Cottage Garden (ACG) is trying its best to discern exactly what season it is and what it should do about it.  Current cohabitating contributors to the conspicuously colorful collection of organisms with cellulose cell walls include lance-leaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata), orange daylilies (Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus), black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta), Stokes’ aster (Stokesia laevis), wand flower (Oenothera lindheimeri, formerly known as Gaura lindheimeri), gaillardia (Gaillardia pulchella), Asiatic lily (Lilium x ‘Corsica’), thyme (Thymus vulgaris), and prairie coneflower/Mexican hat (Ratibida columnifera).  The English daisies (Bellis perennis), flax (Linum usitatissimum), larkspur (Delphinium carolinianum), and sweet William (Dianthus barbatus ‘Sweet Black Cherry’) are carry-overs from last month.

Left to right: New Jersey tea (Ceanothus americanus) (Image credit Debbie Roos CC BY 2.0); black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta), Stokes’ aster (Stokesia laevis), (Image credits Gary Crispell),

Others new to the conspicuously colorful collection are New Jersey tea (Ceanothus americanus), butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa), purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea), butterfly bush (Buddleja davidii), and love-in-the-mist (Nigella damascena – a total surprise hidden amongst the larkspur).  A decidedly delightful display, if I do say so myself.

The weather continues to be perplexing.  Do we garden in jeans or shorts — sweatshirt, tee shirt, or layered?  Too many decisions.

Thought for the month: If a beverage containing alcohol is a potent potable, is a non-alcoholic beverage impotent?  LET’S GARDEN!!!

Lawn Care

Because I realize there are some of you out there who are too busy/new to the Piedmont of NC/not paying attention/just plain horticulturally uneducated, I am urging you to fertilize your warm-season grasses (Bermuda, zoysia) now, as in right now.  April or May would have been just fine, but now it is mandatory.  You will know how much and what formulation because you got a FREE SOIL TEST earlier.  (No.  Probably not, as you have not fertilized yet.  All excuses from above, I suppose.)  Remember that soil tests are free from April through November.  Contact the NC Cooperative Extension office at 919-560-0525 for more information on obtaining a free soil test kit with instructions. If you insist on winging it, 1 pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of turf is a safe application rate.

Extension Horticulture Agent Jeana Myers from NC State Extension demonstrates how to collect a soil test. (Video credit: Homegrown YouTube Channel from NC State Extension).

June is THE month to fertilize centipede grass.  The 1 pound per 1,000 sq. ft. rate applies to centipede as well.

Summer is a good time to core aerate¹ any lawn.  Aeration facilitates air, water, and nutrient movement through the soil and to the root zone.

Always wanted a zoysia grass lawn?  June is a really good month to start one.  You will need to use sod or plugs, as zoysia seeds are not commercially available.

Fertilizing

Dogwoods (Cornus spp.) can be fertilized now.  Again, a FREE SOIL TEST and its resulting recommendations would be helpful here — too many variables for general guidance.

Throw a handful of 10-10-10 or equivalent at the plants in the veggie garden.  It will assist the quantity and quality of your anticipated harvest.

Planting

All of y’all who have been waiting for warm weather to plant your vegetable garden better hustle up now.  It is here and gone and come again.  So, if you want tomatoes before Labor Day…  At this point it is necessary to install plants rather than seeds for most vegetables other than beans and maybe pumpkins.

For those of you who plan ahead, it is time to start seeds for your fall/winter garden.  Cruciferous veggies (cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, collards) can be started now to be transplanted in mid-July.  For more information on fall vegetable gardening read more about year round gardening on our blog.

Pruning

Coniferous² evergreens such as pine, juniper, chamaecyparis (Chamaecyparis spp.), and cryptomeria (Cryptomeria japonica) can be lightly pruned now.  Be aware that they generally do not produce new foliage beneath a pruning cut.

Hedges and any severely overgrown plants can be radically cut back.  The book says never more than one-third of the top, but anecdotally I can tell you that many broadleaf evergreens and deciduous shrubs can be reduced to 18 inches or so and recover nicely.  (The author, the publication, the Extension Master Gardener SMprogram, NC State Cooperative Extension, and the university assume no liability for plants that do not recover.)

Continue to pinch back garden mums (Chrysanthemum × morifolium) until mid-July if it is fall blooms you desire.  If you do not care when they bloom, well, good for you, you rebel.

Bigleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea macrophylla) can be pruned as soon as the blooms fade.

Azaleas, including Encore® cultivars, can be pruned anytime from bloom fade through the 4th of July.

A dense rhododendron shrub with many green leaves and some branches with brown drooping leaves caused by dieback.

Rhododendron dieback from Botryosphaeria dothidea (Image credit: Elizabeth Bush, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Bugwood.org)

Dieback can occur in ericaceous³ plants in early summer.  Rhododendrons, including azaleas, pieris (Pieris spp.), and others can be infected by the fungus Botryosphaeria dothidea or a Phomopsis spp. fungus.  Scraping away the bark with a knife reveals a reddish-brown discoloration under the bark on dying branches of rhododendron. On azaleas, the discolored wood under the bark appears chocolate brown. Prune infected branches well below the point of infection and sterilize your pruning tools between cuts with a 10% bleach solution or 70% isopropyl alcohol.  (Good gracious, NO — not the 140-proof vodka.)  Destroy all clippings.

Spraying

Be on the lookout for the following dastardly destructive six- and eight-legged pests: lace bugs (azaleas, pyracantha), leaf miners (boxwoods), spider mites (needle-leaf evergreens), bagworms (mostly, but not exclusively, on needle-leaf evergreens), and aphids on anything they can get their pointy little mouthparts into.

There are numerous pest-control products available.  Try organic products first.  The planet is counting on you.

Japanese beetle adult and leaf damage (Image credit: Steve Schoof, NCSU)

June is prime Japanese beetle time.  (Contrary to popular myth, they do not sing “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” in Japanese while devouring your roses and crape myrtles.)  Treat them with an appropriate pesticide or pick them off and drown them.  Smush them if it gives you satisfaction.  (Personally, “I Can’t Get No Satisfaction.”)  You will find additional help in this previous blog post – Coping During Japanese Beetle “Season.”

Be aware of tomato early blight.  It shows up as brown spots on the lower leaves, followed by yellowing around the spots; eventually the whole leaf will usually turn yellow and drop.  There are several products available to treat early blight, some with a zero-days-to-harvest rating.

Vegetable gardens are susceptible to a myriad of pests.  Lots of insects (and other genera) like the fruits of your labor as much as you do — and they outnumber us.  There are multiple species of worms seeking sustenance from your cruciferous veggies.  Then there are the cucurbit lovers: cucumber beetles on (believe it or not) cucumbers and other cucurbits, squash borers on most squash varieties and melons.  You might also find flea beetles (they do not sing either) on any bean species, plus tomatoes and eggplant.  And let us not forget the ubiquitous aphids.

Continue spray programs for roses, fruit trees, and bunch grapes.

Use pesticides only when necessary.  ALWAYS read the label and follow the instructions.  Try organic first.

Miscellaneous Stuff to Do Outside in June

A word about watering.  Sometime this summer you will find it necessary to supplement Mother Nature’s somewhat capricious watering schedule.  Plants, including lawn grasses, need about one inch of water per week to sustain growth.  It is best applied in the early morning to minimize evaporative loss.  Evening watering is acceptable if leaf surfaces will be dry before nightfall — damp leaves promote disease. More information on drought-related watering is available in this previous blog post.

Alas, strawberry season is over.  It is appropriate now to renovate those beds in preparation for September planting.

Once you have exhausted the day’s to-do list (and most likely yourself), take time to kick back and enjoy the garden.  Outdoor living spaces were made for June evenings — food, family, friends, firepit, and a cool beverage (to go with the s’mores, silly).  That is what it is all about.  As T.S. Eliot wrote in “Choruses from “The Rock” (1934): “There is no life that is not in community.”  Find your community and welcome summer.

Notes

1-Core aeration is the mechanical removal of small plugs of soil and thatch from a lawn, improving air, water, and nutrient penetration to grass roots.

2-Coniferous refers to cone-bearing evergreen trees and shrubs, such as pines, junipers, and firs.

3-Ericaceous refers to plants in or adapted to the conditions preferred by the heath family (Ericaceae), which thrive in acidic soils. Rhododendrons, azaleas, blueberries, and pieris are common examples.

Resources and Additional Information

A how-to on preparing your (free until November!) soil test: Now’s the Perfect Time to Test Your Soil! – Durham County Center | N.C. Cooperative Extension

Helpful information on summer and fall vegetable gardening: Vegetable Gardening 101 – Gardening | NC State Extension and previous blog post Garden Veggies Year Round – One Gardener’s Calendar

More about rhododendron and azalea dieback and other diseases: Azalea & Rhododendron Diseases in South Carolina: Identification, Prevention, and Treatment | Home & Garden Information Center

Learn more about Japanese beetle management here: Japanese Beetle | NC State Extension Publications and previous blog post Coping During Japanese Beetle “Season”

Guidance for drought-related watering strategies: Essential Gardening Tips for Drought Conditions

Edited by Susan Sharp, NC State Extension Master Gardener SM volunteer of Durham County

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Sustainable Ways to Combat Mosquitoes in Your Landscape

By Melinda Heigel, NC State Extension Master GardenerSM volunteer of Durham County

(Left to right) Planting for pollinators, like this Eastern tiger swallowtail butterfly (Papilio glaucus), is one of the biggest developments in sustainability today. When out fostering pollinator habitat, gardeners might also want to think about ways to reduce or influence mosquito habitats. Mosquitoes, like this Asian tiger mosquito (Ades albopictus), can make time in the landscape less than enjoyable. (Image credit: Melinda Heigel; NC State Extension)

I recently installed a new garden to support beneficial insects in my small urban landscape. While out babying my new plants, I happily discovered they are already attracting a host of pollinators like butterflies, moths, and all kinds of bees. Sadly, I found that I, the red-blooded gardener, was attracting a ton of mosquitoes when tending my new charges. Turns out that mosquitoes are most active early in the morning and later in the evening. They keep gardeners’ hours in your landscape and are out when you most likely are too. And with all the much-needed rain we are getting this week, female mosquitoes have some lovely new water sources where they can lay their eggs.1 Mosquitoes are not only annoying, but of course they can also transmit diseases to humans like West Nile virus and are the carriers for the parasite that causes heartworm disease in dogs.

There are several steps you can take to make your landscape more fun to garden in and less attractive to mosquitoes. Of course, I can use an insect repellant and wear long sleeves and pants, but I wanted to see what else I could do on a foundational level to impact the number of mosquitoes I am encountering in my outdoor space.

Before I outline some simple, sustainable steps we can all take to control pesky mosquitoes, I want to address one potentially controversial option: residential aerosol fogging. You’ve probably seen signs advertising services to spray your yard with the promise of, “No more bites.” Homeowners can also purchase do-it-yourself products as well. This control practice is called adulticiding as these sprays typically target adult mosquitos that are actively flying at the time of treatment or who will rest on a treated surface while the chemical is still active.

While they can be effective, they have some real drawbacks to consider. They don’t address larvae that will hatch later and continue the insects’ lifecycles.3 Environmental factors like rain can impact the efficacy of these treatments and make them terribly short-lived. It can be expensive. And there is always the possibility of drift when either you or a professional are spraying. This means that wind may carry the product where you don’t want it: into a neighbor’s landscape or into your own bed with flowering plants and pollinators.

Personally, my biggest concern about this method is indeed the health of pollinators (and fish if you have a water source or pond nearby). The most common active ingredient in these products is pyrethroids. These chemicals are toxic not only to adult mosquitoes but also to beneficial insects we want around like beetles, ladybugs, green lacewings, and bees. In my landscape, I am trying to support pollinators, not endanger them. To be sure, employing this chemical control method is an individual choice, but what else can a gardener do that is both effective and wildlife friendly?

Understand the Mosquito Lifecycle

(Left to right) The first three stages in the lifecycle of a mosquito are dependent on water. Mosquito eggs in water. (Imager credit: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Lauren Bishop, CDC public domain)

First, know your enemy (Joking, not joking). Mosquitoes have four distinct stages in their lifecycle–egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The most important thing to know about these stages is that the first three occur in water. Only the adults fly for a short time. Females of many species dine on the blood of humans and other animals (Note that males don’t; they feed solely on plant nectar). Once females complete a blood meal, they lay eggs in or near water, soil or near the base of some plants that might collect water. Some eggs can persist in dry conditions for a limited period of time, but water is always a necessary ingredient.

Reduce Mosquito Habitat

After some rain this week, I scouted out places in my outdoor areas where standing water was available to serve as breeding sites: a small amount of rain caught in watering cans, plant saucers, and a pile of reserve mulch material I have covered with a tarp in my driveway. Time to “tip and toss!” (Image credit: Melinda Heigel)

Since water is essential for the completion of the mosquito lifecycle, take a good look around your site. Dr. Michael Waldvogel, NC State Extension Specialist, suggests that “(m)odifying or eliminating breeding sites is the long-term solution to mosquito problems.” He suggests the tip and toss method where you frequently empty containers around your landscape and dwelling that can hold water such as dishes under flower pots designed to catch runoff water, buckets, and empty garden pots (doesn’t every garden have these laying around?). Some types of mosquitoes only need 1 tablespoon of water in which to develop.2

If you have a birdbath or other water source for wildlife in your landscape, flushing those out and refiling with fresh water at least twice a week will help eliminate mosquito eggs, larvae known as wrigglers, and pupa.

If you are into eco-friendly irrigation and have barrels or containers to catch rain water, keep them covered with screening to help with mosquitos and debris. Waldvogel suggests also keeping the screens washed off and clean.

Other culprits you might not suspect include clogged gutters, areas in your landscape that have poor drainage where water might stand, pet bowls, wheel barrows, trash cans, woodpiles, cups and bottles out for recycling, and things like catch basins in your drainage system.

Assemble A Mosquito Dunk Bucket

A simple and effective way to control the non-adult population of mosquitoes in your landscape is with a mosquito dunk bucket, which ends the lifecycle at the larval stage. (Right to left) Here is one in my side yard adjacent to my newly-installed pollinator garden, and this dry donut-shaped object is a biological control (with a bacterium named Bti) for mosquitoes sometimes called a “dunk.” These larvicides also come in other forms, including liquid, pellets, and granules. (Image credit: Melinda Heigel)

While chemical fogs focusing on adult mosquitoes are non-specific, meaning they will harm or eliminate many insects indescriminately, there is a safer more effective method that will only target mosquitos in their larval stage. Enter the mosquito dunk. Looking like a small hard tablet, the mosquito dunk contains a naturally occurring bacterium Bti (Bacillus thuringiensis, subspecies israelensis). When placed in water with mosquito larvae, the larvae ingest the Bti spores and die often within 24 hours. The good news is that Bti target larval mosquito digestive systems and are safe for humans, pets, fish, and beneficial insects.

So how does a dunk bucket work? The dunk bucket approach to mosquito control is sort of like setting a honey pot for female mosquitoes. You are essentially creating a controlled habitat for females to lay eggs that will never mature into adults. Don’t worry — you aren’t likely attracting more mosquitoes to your environment. Remember they are there anyway, and this helps concentrate where breeding is happening.

You don’t need many materials to set up this “Bucket of Doom,” as some folks call it. Just the following:

  • Bucket
  • Something to cover the bucket like screening or a mesh insert
  • Natural material like straw, hay, grass clippings or dried leaves
  • Water
  • Mosquito Dunk® or other brand containing Bti

(Left) Materials I used for constructing my dunk bucket included a well-fitting bucket lid that had a plastic mesh top. I found this online at a hydroponic growing site, but you don’t have to get fancy. Something as simple as chicken wire or a bucket lid with holes drilled in it will work as long as the females can enter it to lay eggs. I have even seen this step listed as optional, but I wanted to discourage my dog or any other small critters from getting too curious. (Right) I used packaged straw from a hardware store, but again, yard waste like dried leaves or grass clippings will do the trick.

Setting the Dunk Bucket “Trap”

Here are the easy steps to getting your bucket up and running. It will be set to go within a few days.

(Left to right) Adding the straw and water, leaving it in the sun, and waiting a few days before I added the dunk for maximum fustiness. Seriously, though, this doesn’t smell foul. And in the landscape in an out-of-the way site, I never caught whiff of any unpleasant odors. (Image credit: Melinda Heigel)

  • Add several big fistfuls of your natural material (hay, straw, dried leaves, etc.) to your empty bucket.
  • Fill the bucket about halfway with water.
  • Let your bucket sit and get “funky” for a few days. This quasi-fermentation process emits gasses that attract mosquitos. Putting your work-in-progress in a sunny location helps speed up this process.
  • After a few days, sit the dunk inside the bucket.
  • Place your bucket in the landscape. Mosquitos like a shaded area that is low-traffic, so think about where you can place yours. Another tip is to locate it in areas that are mosquito-prone. I have some larger shrubs close to my house near my pollinator garden where I put my bucket.
Mosquito Dunk Bucket Maintenance and Considerations

You should check your bucket weekly and replace water levels as needed. Remember if you get a lot of rain (wishful thinking during drought), you will also want to make sure your bucket is not overflowing and adjust the water level as needed. The dunk itself will last about a month, so put a reminder on your calendar so you remember to put out a new one. You do not have to dump the contents at any given period, just keep the water level and Bti tablets consistent. At the end of the warm mosquito season, it is safe to just empty the bucket on the lawn.

While a properly-maintained bucket the is indeed controlling mosquitos, remember that a poorly-maintained one actually just becomes a breeding site once dunks are no longer active.

Depending on our outdoor space, you may want to consider adding more than one bucket. Mosquitoes, like most things organic in this world, don’t observe borders or property lines. Dunk buckets are effective, but they don’t eliminate all mosquito pressure. Consider asking your neighbors to join you in this endeavor to try and broaden the scope of this control beyond your immediate landscape.

While tip and toss and dunk buckets aren’t the only methods to control mosquitos and help ensure both gardener and pollinator health, they are easy, inexpensive, and effective especially when used in tandem. I encourage you to give them a try.

Notes

1–According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, the average span of mosquito lifecycle is 2 weeks. Environmental conditions can shorter that to 4 days or lengthen that to up to a month.

2–https://hgic.clemson.edu/hot-topic/importance-of-reducing-mosquito-breeding-sites/

Resources and Additional Information

Why we should care about pollinators

Pollinator conservation links

NCSU on mosquito control around homes and communities

Podcast link University of Georgia entomologist and public health extension agent on mosquitos and ticks

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