South African winters vary dramatically depending on where you live. On the Cape’s west coast, winter means rain and mild cold. On the Highveld, it means clear, icy nights with frost that can drop to minus five degrees Celsius or below. In both cases, the garden requires attention as temperatures fall and growth slows. Understanding what your specific conditions demand will save you from losses that could otherwise have been avoided.
Know your garden’s frost risk
The starting point of any winter garden preparation is understanding the frost situation in your area. The Highveld, the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands and parts of the Eastern Cape and Karoo all experience frost regularly from May through August. Cloudless, windless nights are the conditions most likely to produce damaging temperatures, so keeping an eye on the forecast through winter is worthwhile.
Not all frost is equal. White frost occurs when moisture freezes on leaf surfaces. Black frost occurs when temperatures drop below zero in dry conditions, producing no ice crystals but still causing the cell damage that kills frost-tender plants. Frost damage presents as blackened, translucent or wilted foliage that does not recover once temperatures rise.
Adjust your watering
In winter, plants absorb water more slowly and evaporation is reduced. Overwatering in cold weather is just as damaging as underwatering in summer, as saturated soil in cold temperatures promotes root rot and compounds the effects of frost. Water during the warmest part of the day rather than in the morning or evening, focusing on the root zone rather than overhead application.
Do not leave irrigation systems running overnight in frost-prone areas. Water left on foliage overnight in freezing temperatures actively accelerates frost damage, and frozen pipes are a practical problem in their own right.
Mulch generously
A thick layer of organic mulch applied over the root zone of established plants is one of the most effective tools in winter garden management. Coarse compost, bark chips, dry leaves and lawn clippings all work well. The mulch insulates the soil, retaining heat overnight and keeping root-zone temperatures marginally above the ambient air temperature.
Apply mulch to a depth of 7 to 10 centimetres, keeping it away from the base of plant stems to avoid rotting. For recently planted specimens, which are the most vulnerable in their first winter, this step is particularly important.
Feed strategically, or not at all
Fertilising at the wrong time in winter can do more harm than good. A nitrogen-rich fertiliser applied in early autumn encourages a flush of soft new growth that is especially susceptible to frost damage when winter temperatures arrive. If you fertilise in autumn, use a high-potassium formula that helps harden plant tissues rather than stimulating new growth.
Through winter, established garden beds generally don’t need feeding. Actively growing winter vegetables are the exception and can be given a monthly dose of a balanced, soluble fertiliser.
Protect tender plants actively
Plants that are not frost-hardy should be given active protection during the coldest months. Horticultural fleece, available at most nurseries, is the most practical option. It allows air, light and water to pass through while preventing temperatures beneath it from dropping to damaging levels. It can be left in place over tender plants for the duration of the cold period.
Container plants have the advantage of being moveable. During periods of severe cold, pots of tender plants can be relocated to a sheltered area such as a veranda, unheated garage or covered patio, and returned to their regular position when temperatures rise.
Hold off on pruning
Winter is not the time to prune most plants. Pruning encourages new growth, and new growth in cold weather is vulnerable to frost. Leave established plants in their existing shape through the cold months. If frost has already damaged foliage, leave the dead material in place until spring rather than cutting it back, as it provides additional insulation for the growth below.
The correct time for major pruning in most South African gardens is late winter and early spring, as temperatures begin to rise and before the main growing season begins.
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