In this video, This Old House landscape contractor Roger Cook helps a homeowner maintain an overgrown perennial garden.

Project details

Skill

Cost

Estimated Time

Steps for Maintaining an Overgrown Garden

  • Spread a plastic tarp on the ground in front of the garden bed.
  • Dig up the perennials with a transplanting shovel, then set the plants on the tarp. Fold the tarp over the plants.
  • Use a reciprocating saw to trim the lower ends of fence pickets, removing any rotted wood.
  • Remove all loose, blistered paint from the fence with a wire brush, a triangle scraper, and a putty knife.
  • Brush a fresh coat of solid-body latex stain onto the fence.
  • Use the transplanting shovel to cut each perennial into three or four parts.
  • Trim the plant leaves very short with bypass pruners.
  • Arrange a few of the divided perennials in the garden bed.
  • Dig a shallow hole for each perennial, then sprinkle a little starter fertilizer into each hole.
  • Set the plants into the holes, checking to be sure that they’re at the proper depth.
  • Backfill around each plant with excavated soil.
  • Plant crocus, daffodil, and allium bulbs in between the perennials to produce colorful flowers in early spring.
  • Spread 2 to 3 inches of pine bark mulch over the planting bed.
  • Transplant the remaining divided perennials to a different garden bed.

Tools Needed:

Tools & Materials

  • Transplanting spade
  • Reciprocating saw
  • Triangle paint scraper
  • Paint brush
  • Bypass pruning shears
  • Three-prong cultivator
  • Garden trowel
  • Putty knife
  • Wire brush