To Do in the Garden: July 2025

Gary Crispell, NC State Extension Master GardenerSM volunteer of Durham County

It’s July, Y’all, but you already knew that ‘cause you look at your phone 5 times an hour and it flipped over like a week ago.  July in the Piedmont of North Carolina means HOT, HUMID, and P.M. thunderstorms.  The first two are absolute locks, but the third? Not so much.  June certainly was a harbinger.  It was freakin’ HOT at the end.  The consolation was the ~4” of rain.

The Accidental Cottage Garden (ACG) is looking downright bountiful for the pollinators.  There are many iterations of blackeyed-susans (Rudbeckia fulgida).  Some are the regular yellow petals and dark centers.  Others have yellow and brown or yellow and maroon petals with dark centers and the petals are larger.  The purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) has exploded all through the garden.  They are a favorite here as they not only provide a summer long floral display, but in the fall the gold finches feast on the seed heads (hence the profusion throughout the garden). 

Rudbeckia fulgida and Echinacea purpurea can provide an abundance of flowers to enjoy through the summer heat once they are established. (Image credit: Lucy Bradley CC BY 4.0; Cathy Dewitt CC BY 4.0)

The liatris (L. spicata) may need to relocate.  His neighbor, the peony (P.) has usurped much of what used to be her space.  The “Star Gazer” lily (Lilium x ‘Star Gazer’) has more blooms this year than ever before and is spectacular.  Similarly, the balloon flower (Platycodon grandiflorus) is loaded with blooms.  We’ve been pruning out the spent blooms to encourage a second round.  There are several daylily varieties (Hemerocallis spp.).  There are so many varieties, and we’ve had them long enough that I no longer remember their names (except the one named Bob).  The accompanying shrubs, Limelight hydrangea (H. panniculata ‘Limelight’), butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii), and Knockout rose (Rosa x Radazz) complete the neighborhood’s floral display.

Liatris spicata and Platycodon grandiflorus are in full bloom at the cottage garden waiting to be enjoyed by all visitors (human and pollinators). (Image credit: Hedwig Storch CC BY-SA 3.0; Cathy DewittCC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

OK, perhaps I have blathered long enough.  Time to slather on the sunscreen, douse ourselves in insect repellent, and sally forth into your garden.

Lawn Care

Fertilize warm season grasses (Bermuda, St. Augustine, zoysia) now if you haven’t done so yet. Mow these grasses by removing no more than 1/3 of the total length. Mow cool season grasses no lower than 3”-4”.

Fertilizing

Last chance to fertilize landscape plants until 2026. It is an excellent time to take FREE SOIL TESTS.  Boxes for the samples and instruction sheets are available from the Extension Office at 721 Foster Street, Durham.  They are only free until the end of November.

Planting

It is not too late (nor too early, for that matter) to plant pumpkins, broccoli, beans, collards, brussels sprouts, carrots from seed and tomato plants. Get a jump on the fall garden season by starting cruciferous veggies (cabbage, cauliflower, etc.) in seed starter flats to be transplanted to the garden in mid-August.

Pot up or transplant overgrown house plants.  Set them outside in a shade to part sun location if possible.  They will thoroughly enjoy the summer vacation.  Don’t forget to keep them watered.

Pruning

Trees that bleed a lot when cut (E.g. birch, maple, dogwood, elm) can be pruned this month. Cut way back those overgrown landscape plants and hedges.  August will be too late. Coniferous plants (produce seeds in cones) can be lightly pruned now. Keep garden mums (Chrysanthemum sps.) pinched back until mid-month for fall blooms. Blackberry and raspberry fruiting canes can be cut back right after the last blackberry cobbler of the year. To promote a second blooming of perennials, prune the spent blooms before they set seeds.

Spraying

Be on the lookout for these nefarious characters, bag worms (pick off the bags and destroy them as ever you will.  I thoroughly smush them.), leaf miners (try to take away their little headlamps so they won’t be able to see where they are going), spider mites (really tiny, look for telltale webs on undersides of the leaves), lace bugs, Japanese beetles (a soak in soapy water leaves them clean…and dead.), and the ubiquitous aphids.  If you shot them with soapy water they will react just like the Japanese beetles—but not like the English kind who seemed to enjoy warm soapy water.

Bagworms can feed on many plant species but are most common on conifers such as Leyland cypress, arborvitae, cedar, juniper, and pine. (L) Mature bagworm in protective coating; (R) Damage on a Juniper tree from encircling bagworms. (Image credit: Entomology notes, NCSU Extension).

If you use toxic chemicals read the label and follow the instructions. Be alert for tomato blight and treat with a fungicide as necessary. Keep up with the perpetual spray programs for roses, fruit trees, and bunch grapes. Veggie pests that are voraciously trying to destroy your crop this month include cucumber beetles (on guess what), flea beetles (not on fleas) on tomatoes, beans, and eggplants, and aphids on anything they can get their sucky little mouth parts into.

OTHER BASICALLY NON-MANDITORY THINGS WITH WHICH TO WILE AWAY JULY

If you are truly bored you may build cold frames or a greenhouse in preparation for the winter to come (and it will).  I’m thinking I might just go park my…self in the back yard under the gardenia (G. jasminoides) with a cold beverage and luxuriate in the heavenly odoriferousness of the wonderfully white blooms while I listen to the indigenous wildlife communicate with each other.  It’s quite stress relieving.  Again, it’s July in North Carolina.  Adapt and enjoy.

A cartoon sloth peacefully sleeping on a green couch.

(Image credit: Pixaby)

Additional Resources

The NC Cooperative Extension has a list of titles that can provide guidance for summer vegetable gardening. https://guilford.ces.ncsu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Successful-Summer-Veggie-Gardens-Handout.pdf?fwd=no

Plant Delights Nursery gives advice on plants that flower in the summer. https://www.plantdelights.com/collections/summer-flowers-plants-perennials-that-bloom-all-summer?srsltid=AfmBOoooiFP7xp0tWt3A_ioW_TDqQMfDKaLKolF8V-w5SvLmxVAN7wn0

Looking for some drought tolerant plants that bloom in the summer? The NC Plant Toolbox has several suggestions. https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/find_a_plant/?nc_region__id=3&resistance_to_challenges__id=3&maintenance__id=1&flower_bloom_time__id=3&q=summer

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To Do in the Garden: June 2025

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

(Left to right) Lanceleaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata) and Stoke’s aster (Stokesia laevis) are strutting their stuff this June in the ACG thanks to all the rain we received in May. (Image credit: Debbie Roos CC BY 2.0; Melinda Heigel; Hope Duckworth CC BY 4.0)

Will you looky here, it is June.  I must have turned my back in April, and May happened while I wasn’t looking.  I do remember some rain…in bunches.  My gauge reads 6.15” on the 29th with a bit more in the forecast.  We’ll need it this month as things begin to heat up.  The last couple of Junes have been a little stingy in the rain department.

The Accidental Cottage Garden (ACG) has been spectacular all spring.  Right now, there is a plethora of blooms and an exciting palette of colors. I counted nineteen different species in bloom. There are Chinese forget-me-nots (Cygnoglossum amabile), lance leaf coreopsis (C. lanceolata), purple cone flower (Echinacea purpurea), English daisies (Bella perennis) and gallardia (G. pulchella).  There is the luscious pink of the Corsica lily (Lilium x Corsica), and the blue/purple of the Stoke’s aster (Stoksia laevis) playing off each other.  There are two varieties of day lily, Hemerocallis x Stella d’Oro and the species typical orange “ditch lily.”

Another very orange plant currently in bloom is the butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa).  Speaking of butterflies, the butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii) brings some height to the WNW side of the garden.  The sweet William (Dianthus barbatus) is still blooming, though not as profusely as last month and the same can be said of the spiderwort (Tradescantia virginiana).

(Left to right) New to the ACG this season is the New Jersey tea (Ceanothus americanus), a native deciduous shrub that can be found in all parts of North Carolina. Its blossoms are stunning and total pollinator magnets. The conical Mexican hat (Ratitida columnifera) offers up some whimsy. (Image credit: Debbie Roos CC BY 2.0)

A surprise to me (Mostly due to unfamiliarity with the plant.) is the New Jersey Tea (Ceanothus americanus) plants installed to replace two crape myrtles in front of the house.  The bees of all types have been all over the white ping pong ball inflorescences.  In front of them the false vervain (Verbena carnea) and forking larkspur (Consolida regalis) provide two different shades of violet.  In the same vicinity are Mexican hat (Ratitida columnifera), tickseed (Coreopsis verticillata) and fire engine red gladiolus (G. communis x hybrid).  Oops.  I left out the cornflower (Centaurea cyanus) and the perennial garden mum (Chrysanthemum x ‘Too-Many-Choices’).  And that’s just the front yard.

There’s a lot to do in June, so let’s get started before it gets too hot.

Lawn Care

Last call to get off your duff and feed those warm season grasses (Bermuda, zoysia).  Well, perhaps not THE last call, but if you want a lush green lawn all summer…just sayin’.  Of course, we all know that you sent in a FREE SOIL TEST last fall or this spring so you know exactly what N-P-K ratio to use and in what quantity to apply…right?  (Come on, friends.  They are FREE from April through November.)

June is THE month to apply fertilizer to centipede lawns.  If you, too, didn’t get your soil tested the recommended application rate is ½ pound of 15-0-14 or equivalent per 1000 square feet.

June is as good a month as any (and better than most) to core aerate your lawn.  It will facilitate getting water and nutrients down into the root zone where the plants can use it.  And it puts air into our heavy Triassic Piedmont soils.  Win, win, win!

Fertilizing

This is a great time to fertilize dogwoods (Cornus sps.).

Vegetable gardens will reward you later if you give them a side dressing of a balanced (10-10-10 or equivalent) fertilizer about now.

Planting

For everyone trying to outlast the frost, it’s gone.  No more until October (maybe).  Therefore, you may plant all the things in the vegetable garden safely.  (Safely, from cold.  No guarantees against critters and single-celled pests.)  It is borderline too late for seeding.  Transplants would be a safer (There’s that word again.) bet. 

Pruning

A collection of gardening tools including various types of pruning shears and loppers with orange and red handles, displayed on a concrete surface.

(Image credit: NC State Extension)

June is a fine time to prune lots of stuff.  Make sure the tools are sharp and lubricated.  (Just the tools, now.  The operator should not be lubricated.)

Coniferous (seeds from cones) trees and shrubs such as cedar, pine, arborvitaes, chamaecyparis, junipers, cryptomeria, etc. may be pruned judiciously now.  Be gentle as these plants do not generally put out new growth below the pruning cut.

Azaleas should be pruned before the Fourth of July except for Encores®.  The only information I could find recommended pruning them in the spring immediately after the first blooming.

Some ericaceous plants (acid-loving) may suffer from a disease called die back.  As the name implies, the branches die back from the terminal ends.  Prune these branches out as soon as you detect it by making cuts 4” to 6” below the diseased part of the branch.  Be sure to sanitize your pruner with a 10% bleach solution between each cut.

Hydrangea macrophylla (macro=big, phylla=leaf) can be pruned when the flowers fade.

Keep garden mums (Chrysanthemum sps.) pinched back until mid-July for nice full plants and lots of fall blooms.

Spraying

Be vigilant in looking for June’s usual suspects—lace bugs on azaleas and pyracantha, leaf miners, especially on boxwoods, bagworms on evergreens and aphids like everywhere on everything.  If the bagworms have already ensconced themselves in their little bags you will have to pick them off individually and dispose of them as you see fit.  I smush ‘em.  Treat the others with the appropriate pesticide applied as per the label.

(Left to right) Be on the lookout for these pathogens and pests this June: circular dark spots on tomato leaves signal early blight of tomatoes; leaf miners on boxwoods leave blister mines and discolored leaves; and aphids, as seen here on a tulip poplar leaf, leave a shiny, sticky residue behind called honeydew. (Image credit: Inga Meadows, NC State Extension; SD Frank, NC State Extension)

Be watchful for tomato early blight.  It is caused by two closely related fungi, Alternaria tomatophila, and A. solani.  (See, I can do research.)  The initial symptoms are dark spots on the leaves.  The spots will eventually form concentric circles.  The leaves will then become yellow, turn brown and fall off spreading the spores to the soil to wait until you plant tomatoes there again next year.  And the cycle repeats itself.  Gaaaah!  Nature can be sooo frustrating!  In order to try to interrupt the cycle, remove the diseased leaves and treat the rest of the plant with an appropriate fungicide.  There are organic options.

While we’re in the veggie garden (If one grows tomatoes amongst the flowers, is it a flower garden with tomatoes or a tomato garden with flowers?  Philosophy is so much fun.) there are vast hordes of insects who think that every week is “Restaurant Week” in the garden.  There are several different moth larvae feeding on the cruciferous veggies (broccoli, cabbages, etc.), cucumber beetles on cucumbers (I mean really?  Where else would one expect to find cucumber beetles?) and melons (Oh.  There.), squash vine borers on cucurbits (squash, melons, not cucumbers), flea beetles on beans, tomatoes, and eggplants, and the ubiquitous aphids about whom we have already gossiped.

“The Beetles are Coming!” Keep your eyes open this month for Japanese beetles (Popillia japonica). They attack a variety of trees, shrubs, and edible crops. (Right) Among other plant parts, Japanese beetles devour leaf tissue, leaving a “skeletonized” leaf with only the veins remaining. (Image credit: Steve Schoof, NCSU/NCSU Extension)

Japanese beetles will make their grand entrance sometime this month.  Spray them, powder the plants, pick them off and drown (or squish) them.  Back in the cretaceous period, my Dad gave me a penny per beetle collected in a one pound tobacco can with kerosene in the bottom (No longer recommended, of course, but water made sudsy with dish soap is a safe and effective alternative.)  Pretty soon there won’t even be pennies.  This is progress.

Poison ivy/oak, kudzu, and honeysuckle are ripe for eradication efforts this month.

Per usual, continue spray programs for roses, bunch grapes, and fruit trees.

OTHER WONDER-FILLED AND GARDEN-RELATED OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PURSUED IN JUNE

Watering.  I know, Mother Nature has on several occasions in May attempted to drown your plants…all of them.  It would be foolhardy to assume that this will continue.  The last few Junes have tended toward the dry side.  Plants in general including the lawn need about 1” of water per week.  If they are in pots or planters, they may need more.  It is best to water in the morning to minimize evaporation and disease spread.  Mother Nature is aware of these admonitions but doesn’t read this blog.1

Strawberry beds can be renovated now because strawberry fields aren’t forever as it turns out.

Patios and decks should receive maximum use this month.  Cool beverages, light hors-d’oeuvres, or charcuterie boards along with lively conversation are highly recommended.  Organic varieties of each are available.

Have a sensational and scintillating summer, Y’all!!  

Notes:

1–Later this month on the blog, Extension Master Gardener volunteer Eric Wiebe will be walking us through sustainable and effective drip irrigation (It’s easier than you think!) Stay tuned.

Resources and Additional Information:

More on pruning hydrangeas in Martha Engelke’s previous blog post “When Should I Prune My Hydrangea?… It Depends:” https://wp.me/p2nIr1-3oH


General pruning tips with NC State Extension: https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/general-pruning-techniques

Address Japanese beetle pressure with Kathryn Hamilton’s blog article “Coping During Japanese Beetle “Season:” https://durhammastergardeners.com/2022/06/15/coping-during-japanese-beetle-season-2/

Tips on eradicating poison ivy with Clemson Cooperative Extension: https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/poison-ivy/

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