Returned from holiday to find bedraggled plants, an overgrown lawn, herbs and flowers which have run to seed and a glut of crops you couldn't give away?
So, what do you do?
Don't despair
The rain we've had this summer may have gone some way to saving flower borders, but containers left in sheltered spots may have dried out without the luxury of an automatic irrigation system, or a friendly neighbour to water them in your absence.
Guy Barter, RHS chief horticultural adviser, reckons that if your bedding plants haven't dried out completely, you should have a month of good growing weather left in the south of the country and a little less in the north.
"The recent wet weather will have helped gardens enormously, but containers are still likely to be fairly dry, so you need to give them a really good soak, deadhead the flowers and give plants a good feed," he advises.
Cut back and feed container plants
Container plants, including petunias, can be cut back and should produce another burst of growth, provided the slugs haven't devoured the base of the plants during the rainy period, he says.
You should also be able to give trailing plants such as lobelia and bacopa a haircut and a feed, to prompt them into further flowering.
Watch out for slugs
"People who have been away during the wet weather should be prepared to come back to find a lot of slug damage," he adds. "They will eat petunias around the base and feast on hosta leaves, and the plants will not produce more leaves this year."
It may be wise to feed vulnerable plants with nematodes, biological controls which are specifically designed to attack slugs and vine weevil.
Be aware that many biological controls become less reliable when the temperature drops, as the predatory insects which provide the control then multiply more slowly. Check for greenfly and blackfly and take off shoots on plants which are infested and dispose of them.
Grab plant bargains
"You can also get some plant bargains at garden centres at this time of year, including herbaceous perennials such as delphiniums and lupins, which have finished flowering, but should grow strongly next year and hopefully be free of mildew."
Tackle overgrown lawns
You may be returning to long grass, which will have been growing thanks to the mixed weather we've had in summer. When tackling it, Guy recommends not taking off more than a third at a time until it has recovered and don't feed the lawn until autumn.
As for vegetables, you should be returning home to bumper crops, although tomato blight tends to appear in warm, wet weather and if your plants succumb, there's not a lot you can do apart from consign them to the bonfire.
Fill gaps in borders
Fill gaps in flowerbeds with dahlias, which can be lifted at the first frosts, the tubers stored in a frost-free dry place, then replanted next year.
Dunk container plants
Containers holding year-round-interest plants, such as shrubs or evergreens, may benefit from being submerged in a bucket of water to re-wet the compost, but it is difficult to tell if the compost is thoroughly soaked and important not to waterlog the plants.
After re-wetting, robust architectural plants, such as phormiums and box, can be lifted out of their containers with their root system intact, so you can see if the compost has been completely soaked through.
Continue to deadhead roses and cut back finished summer-flowering perennials, removing supports which propped up the plants that have stopped flowering. These can be cleaned with a mild detergent and put away until next year.
And if all else fails...
Steal a march on the cooler months by clearing out wilted bedding plants from pots and invest in some spring bulbs and other plants for autumn and winter.
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