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Red peppers on vine

What Are April Garden Tasks?

It's Grow Time!

April throws open the garden gates, inviting warmer temperatures, hours of added sunlight, and cozy soil temperatures to coax every plant back into joyful growth. The entire month of April is celebrated as National Gardening Month.
Red peppers on vine
It's Grow Time!
Plant warm-season veggie starts: tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, cucumbers, squash, pumpkins, and melons.  You can also direct sow veggie seeds: beans, corn, beets, radish, and carrots.
Zelkova tree canopy
Plant A Tree
April is the time to dream big: plant new trees and shrubs, remove unneeded tree stakes from trees planted last year, and celebrate Arbor Day (the last Friday of the month on April 24th) by adding an additional tree to your garden.
Healthy roots in rich, dark soil
Soil Health
Strengthen your soil defense system: enrich beds with compost or worm castings and apply a 2”-3” mulch layer to save water, cool and warm roots naturally, and reduce weed growth.
Blooming wisteria
Vining & Twining
April is the perfect time to plant vines. As many begin to bloom this month, explore the wide selection of vines with stunning flowers ready to climb and shine.
Snail on leaf
Watch For Garden Pests
Keep an eye out for garden pests like aphids and snails—and invite nature’s helpers by planting pollinator-friendly flowers such as pincushion flower, coneflower, and lavender.
Drip irrigation watering a shrub
Irrigation Check-In
Give your irrigation system a spring check‑up: fix leaks, clear emitters, and adjust schedules so plants are watered deeply to encourage strong roots, then allowed to dry slightly between waterings as lawns and beds shift into spring mode.

Other Timely Tasks for April

  • Brighten the garden by planting summer annuals like marigolds, coleus, vinca, impatiens, petunias, and celosia. April’s warm soil and sunny days help them settle in quickly and put on an early show of color. You can also direct sow seeds like zinnias and cosmos.
  • Feed roses with an organic, slow-release fertilizer like E.B. Stone™ Organics Rose & Flower Food and keep spring bloomers flowering strong by deadheading spent blooms for fresh new blooms.
  • Build a better lawn: fertilize for root growth, mow at 3” or higher, and spot-seed bare areas as spring warmth settles in.
  • After the blooms fade, give acid lovers some love. Prune spring‑flowering shrubs like azaleas, rhododendrons, and camellias, and follow up with their first feeding of acid food like E.B. Stone™ Organics Azalea, Camellia & Gardenia Food.
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