The May Garden Reset: 7 Essential Chores for a Thriving Season
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Garden
May 27, 2026 • 5:21 PM
8m8 min read
Verified
Source: Unsplash
The Core Insight
May is a critical turning point for the garden. This guide synthesizes essential tasks, from soil preparation and mulching to tick-borne disease prevention and strategic planting, to help you maximize your harvest and maintain a healthy, sustainable landscape throughout the season.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
The May Garden Reset: 7 Essential Chores for a Thriving Season
The Bottom Line
Prioritize Safety: Perform tick checks immediately after every garden session.
Mulch Wisely: Use aged, bulk organic mulch to suppress weeds and build soil health.
Plant Strategically: Direct sow cool-season crops now; wait for settled, warm weather for heat-lovers like tomatoes and squash.
Support Wildlife: Add water features and native plants to turn your yard into a functional habitat.
May is the month where the garden shifts from a quiet promise to a full-blown frenzy. I’ve spent the last few weeks watching my own beds wake up, and I’ve learned that the secret to a successful season is working in sync with the soil’s natural rhythm. The goal is to build a living system that sustains itself, much like the principles discussed in our guide on designing for beauty and biodiversity.
How I Researched This
My advice is rooted in decades of hands-on experience and ongoing conversations with ecologists and horticulturists. I don't rely on generic trends; I look at the life cycles of the plants and insects in my own backyard. I’ve vetted these practices against current research on tick-borne disease prevention and soil biology to ensure that what I’m sharing is both safe and scientifically sound for your home garden.
1. Prioritize Tick-Borne Disease Prevention
May is Lyme Disease Awareness Month, but for those of us with dirt under our fingernails, tick safety is a year-round reality. Ticks are active whenever temperatures climb above freezing. My rule is simple: perform a thorough body check the moment you step inside. Toss your gardening clothes directly into a hot dryer for at least 10 minutes to kill any hitchhikers, and make it a habit to shower within two hours of finishing your work.
When to Actually Do This
While the calendar says May, your local frost date is the true arbiter of success. If you are in a colder zone, hold off on planting heat-lovers like peppers and melons until the soil has truly warmed. If you are in a warmer climate, you may already be looking toward summer maintenance. Always check your local extension office for your specific last frost date.
2. Master Your Mulching Strategy
Forget the bagged, dyed mulch from the big-box stores. I always source aged, bulk organic mulch from a local supplier. It’s better for the soil and looks more natural. Better yet, I “leave the leaves” in many of my beds to provide essential habitat for beneficial insects. If you have large shrub borders, consider planting native groundcovers as a “living mulch” to suppress weeds naturally, a technique that supports the wildlife sanctuary you are building.
Using aged, bulk organic mulch improves soil health and suppresses weeds naturally. (Credit: Davis Dai via Unsplash)
The Natural Approach
Sustainability in the garden starts with what you *don't* do. Skip the synthetic fertilizers if your lawn is already green, you’re just creating extra work for yourself. Instead, focus on screening your finished compost to topdress your beds. It’s the ultimate organic fuel for your plants, similar to the methods used in high-quality seed-starting.
3. Proactive Weed Management
The best way to handle weeds is to catch them while they are still seedlings. I keep a weed encyclopedia handy so I can identify the troublemakers early. For those stubborn patches of lawn you want to convert into garden beds, try solarization with clear plastic or tarping with dark material to kill the grass without chemicals.
The Lazy Gardener's Shortcut
If you’re feeling overwhelmed, focus on the edges. A crisp, clean edge between your lawn and your garden bed makes the entire space look intentional and tidy, even if the middle is a bit wild. It’s the highest visual return on investment for the least amount of effort.
Now is the time to direct sow carrots, beets, radishes, and salad greens. If you started seedlings indoors, remember to “harden them off” by bringing them outside for a few hours a day over the course of a week. Wait until the end of the month, when the weather is reliably settled, to set out your tomatoes, peppers, and squash.
Choose stocky, healthy transplants rather than root-bound plants for better establishment. (Credit: Zoe Richardson via Unsplash)
What Most People Get Wrong
Most gardeners think bigger transplants are better. They aren't. When buying tomato starts, look for stocky, 4-inch plants. A massive, root-bound plant from a nursery will often struggle to establish itself compared to a younger, more vigorous transplant that hasn't been stressed in a small pot.
5. Flower Garden Maintenance
Divide your perennials while the weather is still cool and moist. If you have spring bulbs, deadhead the spent blooms, but leave the foliage alone until it yellows. That foliage is the solar panel that feeds the bulb for next year’s show. You can also direct sow annuals like zinnias and marigolds now for a burst of color later in the season.
The Decision Matrix
If you have a weedy lawn area: Use solarization or cardboard layering to prep a new bed.
If you have a small space: Focus on container gardening with high-impact native plants.
If you have a large garden: Prioritize mulching and edging to maintain visual legibility.
6. Wildlife Habitat Creation
Your garden is part of a larger ecosystem. By installing a simple birdbath or a small water feature, you provide a critical resource for local pollinators and birds. Pair this with native plantings to ensure your garden acts as a sanctuary rather than a sterile plot. If deer are a persistent issue, prioritize physical barriers like fencing early in the month before the new growth becomes too tempting. Learn more about attracting wildlife to your space.
Adding a water feature is a simple way to support local birds and pollinators. (Credit: Karim Sakhibgareev via Unsplash)
7. Lawn and Compost Care
Stop bagging your grass clippings; leave them on the lawn to return nitrogen to the soil. If your lawn is already lush and green, skip the fertilizer entirely to prevent runoff. Meanwhile, turn your attention to the compost pile. Screen out the finished, dark material for your garden beds and ensure the remaining heap stays moist and well-aerated to keep the decomposition process moving efficiently.
Broadfork: Essential for aerating soil without disrupting the delicate fungal networks.
Hori-Hori Knife: The only tool I need for weeding, planting, and dividing perennials.
Cattle Panels: I use these as heavy-duty, DIY trellises for my pole beans and tomatoes.
What Do You Think?
Gardening is a constant experiment, and I’m curious about your experience this season. Are you leaning into the “leave the leaves” approach, or do you prefer a more manicured look for your beds? I’ll be replying to every comment in the first 24 hours, so let’s talk about what’s working in your patch of earth.
Wait until the end of May when the weather is reliably settled and the soil has warmed up.
No, it is better to source aged, bulk organic mulch from a local supplier, or use leaves as a natural mulch.
Perform a thorough body check immediately after gardening, shower within two hours, and put your gardening clothes in a hot dryer for at least 10 minutes.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"What is the one garden chore you find most therapeutic, and which one do you dread the most?"