Posted by Main access Ben Dunn
Winter Gardening in Sydney: Your June–August Checklist
Sydney’s mild winters mean your garden never really shuts down. There’s no deep frost or snow to worry about across most of the city, so June to August is actually one of the best windows of the year to get on top of the jobs that keep a garden healthy — and to set it up to look its best when spring arrives. Here’s a month-by-month checklist of what’s worth doing now.
June: tidy up and protect
- Mulch your garden beds. A 5–7 cm layer of mulch around beds and tree bases locks in soil warmth, suppresses winter weeds and saves you work later. This is the single highest-value winter job.
- Prune dormant ornamental shrubs and deciduous trees. With the leaves gone, you can clearly see the structure and shape plants properly.
- Clear fallen leaves from beds, paths and especially gutters — wet leaf litter is a slip hazard and a pest haven.
July: prune, plant and weed
- Prune roses and fruit trees. Mid-June to late July is prime rose-pruning time in Sydney — cut back by about a third to encourage a strong spring flush.
- Tackle winter weeds while they’re easy. Extra winter rain softens the soil, so weeds like bindii and clover pull out cleanly before they seed in spring. If weeds have got away from you, our weeding service can reset the beds in one visit.
- Plant bare-rooted roses, trees and shrubs while they’re dormant — they establish beautifully over winter.
August: get set for spring
- Feed and refresh. Top up mulch, and as the soil starts to warm late in the month, your garden begins waking up.
- Book your spring tidy-up early. Spring is the busiest time of year for gardeners — locking in a visit now means your garden is sorted before the rush.
Don’t forget the lawn
Your lawn slows right down in winter but still needs the occasional mow at the right height — too short and it scalps. You can hand it to our lawn mowing team.
Short on time this winter?
Winter jobs are easy to put off — and then spring arrives and the garden’s a jungle. A single fixed-price visit gets the pruning, weeding, mulching and clean-up done in one go. Take a look at our gardening packages (from $150), or get in touch for a quick quote.
FAQ
Should I prune in winter in Sydney?
Yes — winter is the ideal time to prune most deciduous trees, roses and many ornamental shrubs while they’re dormant.
Is it worth mulching in winter?
Absolutely. Winter mulching insulates the soil, holds moisture and dramatically reduces the winter and spring weed load.
Do gardens still need maintenance in winter?
They do. Growth slows, but pruning, weeding, mulching and clean-ups are best done now, setting the garden up for a strong spring.