You step outside, morning coffee in hand, spot a few bugs on a rose bush, and instinctively reach for the spray bottle. Later, the lawn looks dry, so out comes the hose. Over the weekend, plants get a heavy trim to “help them grow.”
Yet some of the routines we believe are helping our gardens may quietly be causing more harm than good. World Environment Day, observed every 5th June, puts environmental stewardship and the role individuals can play in it front and centre, and our gardens are no exception.
Fathima Mathen, Marketing Manager for GARDENA South Africa, believes they should be seen as a living ecosystem, not just a collection of plants and an immaculate lawn. “We all garden with good intentions,” she says. “We water, spray and prune because we want our gardens to thrive, but sometimes the very habits we think are helping can disrupt that natural balance. The answer is to care for them in a more considered way.”
She shares five common gardening habits that may be doing more harm than good and some practical tips to fix them:
1. Reaching for chemicals at the first sign of bugs
A few holes in a leaf are not necessarily a cause for alarm. Many insects are actually beneficial to the garden and help to control pests naturally. Spraying too quickly can kill helpful insects along with harmful ones, disrupting the garden’s natural balance.
Do this instead: Remove affected leaves by hand, wash pests off with a jet of water, and use a natural insecticide if necessary.
2. Watering in the middle of the day
You may be tempted to water during the middle of the day, especially when plants look particularly wilted in the heat. But this is often when water is least effective, as much of it can evaporate before it properly reaches the roots.
Do this instead: Water early in the morning or late afternoon when it’s cooler. This reduces evaporation, helps more moisture reach the roots, and conserves water.
3. Overwatering plants
More water does not always mean healthier plants. Constantly wet soil can weaken roots, encourage disease, and slow growth. In winter, when soil stays moist for longer, it’s especially important to avoid overwatering.
Do this instead: Check the soil before watering. If it still feels damp a few centimetres down, hold off. Different plants also need different amounts of water, so let the soil and the plant guide you rather than sticking to a fixed routine.
4. Pruning too aggressively
Pruning can encourage healthy growth but cutting back too much or too often can stress plants. It also removes natural shade and ground cover, leaving soil more exposed to heat, wind and moisture loss.
Do this instead: Prune with purpose. Remove dead, damaged or overcrowded growth first, and avoid heavy cutting unless the plant genuinely needs it. Where possible, keep some natural coverage to help protect the soil.
5. Treating all weeds as enemies
Weeds can be frustrating, and invasive ones do need to be dealt with, but not every unwanted plant needs a chemical response. Reaching for herbicide too quickly can harm surrounding soil, nearby plants and the small organisms that keep a garden healthy.
Do this instead: Start by pulling weeds out by hand when the soil is damp and roots lift more easily. Add mulch where appropriate to suppress new weeds and improve soil health so desired plants can thrive. While invasive weeds do need attention, not every unwanted plant requires an immediate chemical response.
For Mathen, what happens in our gardens reaches far beyond our fences. “How we use water, care for soil and respond to insects all affects the wider environment,” she says. “Even small shifts in gardening habits can add up to a meaningful difference over time.”
“A garden cared for with balance in mind supports a thriving ecosystem, rather than unintentionally working against it, and plays a part in long-term sustainability,” Mathen concludes.
For more gardening inspiration or to view their range of products, visit GARDENA SA at https://gardening.co.za.
