Gardening Guide

Flower Box Gardening Section


 

Flower Box Gardening Navigation


|

Gardening Made Easy Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Perennial+flower+gardening |
Encyclopedia Gardening Flower Plant |
Sacramento Gardening And Fuchsia Flower |
Organic Gardening Gardening Tip Container Gardening Flower |
Garden Gardening Plants Flowers Plant Care Flower Care |
Flower Gardening Tip Gardening Spring Flower |
Design+flower+gardening |
Gardening Planting Flower |
Flower Garden Landscape Gardening Landscape Gardening |
American Beauty Connecticut Flower Gardening |
Perennialflowergardening |
Flower Gardening Tips |
Gardening Gift Flower Gardening Best Gardening Her |
Flower Container Gardening |
Flower Gardening Gardening Gift Lawn Gardening Tip |

List of Flower-Gardening Articles
List of Flower-Gardening Links


Flower Box Gardening Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Flower Box Gardening Products

Bonsai Gardening secrets

Home And Garden - Country And Rural Life

Companion Planting

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Flower Box Gardening sponsors

Flower Box Gardening
 

Latest Flower Box Gardening link added

...

Submit your link on Flower Box Gardening!



The Flower Gardener's Bible: Time-Tested Techniques, Creative Designs, and Perfect Plants for Colorful Gardens
-By: Lewis Hill, Nancy Hill
-Price: $3.22 (New)
$2.14 (Used)

Complete Guide to Flower Gardening (Better Homes & Gardens)
-By: Better Homes and Gardens Books
-Price:
$7.98 (Used)

The Big Book of Flower Gardening: A Guide to Growing Beautiful Annuals, Perennials, Bulbs, and Roses
-Price: $23.85 (New)
$1.16 (Used)

The Essential Flower Gardening Encyclopedia
-Price: $30.00 (New)
$2.00 (Used)

Gardening for All Seasons
-By: Editors of Creative Homeowner
-Price: $13.75 (New)
$7.99 (Used)

 

Welcome to Gardening Guide

 

Flower Box Gardening Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Flower Box Gardening. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Perennial Flower Gardening

from:

A dilemma faced by all gardeners each year is “perennials or annuals?” Technically, a perennial is any plant that grows back for more than two years, without having to re-grow from seed; some perennials can even last for decades. These flowers are important parts of any garden, returning year after year, getting healthier and hardier as the years pass.

Though perennials are initially more expensive than annuals, once planted, they are permanent editions to your garden. In the long run, then, buying perennials may save you money because you won’t have to keep running to the store every year to buy new plants.

The majority of perennials like well-drained soil with a good mixture of clay and sand, tilled to about one foot in depth. With the enormous variety of perennials in existence, though, it is easy to find the right flower for your perennial flower gardening hobby; there are perennials that can tolerate shady areas, full sun, and semi-shade, and perennials that can grow in either alkaline or acidic soils.

Many perennials don’t present much difficulty to grow and can often be planted in less than ideal spots. The yarrow, for example, needs full sun and does well in poor soil, and its flowers come in a wide variety of colors. The bearded iris prefers full sun, blooms in late spring to early summer, and has a cornflower-blue flower with a white beard. Peonies have very fragrant flowers; they bloom from late spring to early summer, do well in full sun, and tolerate moderately moist soil. Perennial sage tolerates full sun as well and produces lavender flowers. Daylilies have trumpet shaped flowers that are beige-pink with a lime throat; they have a very high resistance to disease and pests.

To the delight of many gardeners, perennials bloom at different times during the growing season and so researching the blooming time of each type of flower will allow you to create a garden that could potentially display vibrant colors all season long. To start the growing season, you can use rock cress, bluebells, and bleeding hearts, while for late spring, you can use false indigo, columbine, candytuft, leopard’s bane, bellflower, peonies, and oriental poppies, which often bloom into summer as well. Use mountain bluet, snow-in-summer, garden lilies, violet sage, and stonecrop for mid to late summer color, and for lat summer and fall visual displays, aster, boltonia, blue leadwort, mums, purple coneflower and plaintain lily, black eyed susans, and goldenrod are good choices.

The spring or fall, when the weather is cool and moist, is the best time to plant perennials. You can plant container-grown perennials throughout the growing season, but just make sure to water them well. Be prepared to be not so impressed with your first year perennial flower gardening results, as your plants might need at least a growing season to reach full maturity and a healthy enough state to produce an impressive bloom.

At the end of the growing season, the flowers and foliage of perennial plants die, but the roots continue to live, storing food to help the plant grow back the next growing season. Because the roots continue to live and give off new plants, an essential task in perennial flower gardening is dividing them. You can either divide your perennials in early spring or early fall; plants that bloom in mid to late summer should generally be divided in spring and those that bloom in the spring should be divided in the fall. Some gardeners claim that those that bloom early in the spring should be divided right after they flower, so that they’ll have the strength to flower again next spring.

Since it is often difficult to grow perennials from seed, a good way of starting perennial flower gardening (or just getting an individual flower that caught your eye) without spending money is dividing some existing plant belonging to a friend or neighbor. In this way, you get an inexpensive addition to your garden, and you help your friend or neighbor’s plant by making sure it is healthy and getting enough water and nutrients by dividing it.

As with all flowers, deadheading, or the removal of faded flowers, is also a very important maintenance task in perennial flower gardening. Deadheading ensures neatness in your garden and it also serves to allow the plant to conserve energy for flowering instead of forming seed. You should cut large blooms, such as roses and peonies, off one by one, while you can shear plants with multiple stems and blooms. Keeping up with your deadheading will prevent haphazard, uncontrolled reseeding (which could lead to a disorganized garden and more work for you) and will keep your garden in bloom as often as possible.





 

Flower Box Gardening News

Decisions based on gardening successes and failures yield a good ... - Fort Worth Star-Telegram

The old concrete bench had flanked the passageway to the side yard for 20 years, but what was just beyond demanded some updating. Courtesy of Neil Sperry Much of life involves making decisions. We make some good ones, take wrong turns on others and ...

Read more...


Great Falls garden clubs invite green thumbers to join them - Great Falls Tribune

Whether you're new to gardening or it's been a lifelong passion, you'll find some kindred spirits by joining Great Falls' garden clubs. These energetic members are constantly learning new gardening techniques while beautifying the Great Falls area ...

Read more...


Gifts for the gardener - Star News Online

Remember when most tools had plain wood handles and everything else was green or brown? The emphasis was on performance; appearance didn’t count for much. How things have changed. This year, on my annual hunt for gifts suitable for gardeners, the ...

Read more...


Consider giving books to gardener in your life - Iowa City Press-Citizen

If you are stumped as to what to get those gardening enthusiasts on your list, maybe I can help you start. Each year Iowa State Extension puts out one of the best calendars you will find. Produced with gardeners in mind, each month features a ...

Read more...


Brighten up winter with these flowers - News-Democrat

PHILADELPHIA -- And you thought gardening was for gentle souls. What about forcing bulbs to bloom when they're trying to sleep? In the case of paperwhites and amaryllis, don't fret. They don't sleep. Unlike spring-blooming tulips, hyacinths, crocuses ...

Read more...