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FLOWER Gardening

Article

 
Tip!  Learn to exchange your ideas and information with like-minded people who can show an equal passion for gardening.

Summer, flowers and bedding plants add colour to your lawn. Garden Centres start to fill in the early spring, but you should be careful to plant only after frosts has passed. I would recommend purchasing ready to plant - rather than trying to grow from seeds. When you think of any kind of gardening, think of flower gardening. Flowers and gardens being naturally synonymous with each other.

Flower gardening need not be limited only to summertime. If you plan carefully and plant ahead of time, your garden can be filled with an abundance of flowers for most of the year.

If we start by seasons, then for spring flowers, the best thing you could do would be to plant bulbs. Any nursery will have them, and if you are more inclined towards the exotic, and rarer flowering bulbs, there is a good chance you can have them ordered specially.

Favourites amongst bulb lovers are early springtime Crocuses, and cheerful Snowdrops. Tulips though, are by and away the most famous of bulbs in demand by flower gardeners, and are available in a variety of shades, including a black-coloured one, which is really more of a deep maroon and one of those rare flowers I was talking about earlier.

 

Home Vegetable Gardening Guide. A complete guide to the planting and care of vegetables, fruit, and berries.

Remember that all spring flowering bulbs should be planted in mid autumn, as this is the best time for them. Come any closer to winter and you're in danger of losing your bulbs altogether.

Moving through to summer, we find that perennials are a firm favourite for flower gardening as they yield blooms almost continuously throughout the season, and sometimes beyond. With a little luck and care, you'll also find that most of your perennials will last through to next year, and the year after that, and, well you get the picture right? You will also find that as the years and the seasons wear on, your perennials will become fuller, and generally will become more abundant than the first year you planted them.

Tip! ) Try laying your hands on almost any books, magazines or articles that can enhance your knowledge on gardening.

 

As autumn gently closes in most flower gardens are left bereft of anything but a few small hardy plants. If you are into more dedicated flower gardening however, that need not be the case for you. Hardy, drought resistant plants like Asters number among the many types of autumn flowers available, and will look stunning in late summer/early autumn, Generally, autumn plants will grow to a good 3-4 feet in height, and have vivid colours, as well as the more genteel pastel colours to choose from. Ornamental grasses are another favourite and will nicely complement your autumn flowers.

Definitions:

An annual is a plant that will germinate, flower, and die within a single year or season. Annuals are typically planted in early spring to provide a bright display of colour in the garden, and their bed then cleared out in autumn.
A biennial plant is a plant that takes between twelve and twenty-four months to complete its lifecycle

A perennial is a plant that lives for several years and may not even flower in its first year

A monocarpic plant is a plant that flowers only one time in its lifespan. The time from germination to flowering may be from two up to several years. After flowering the plant will die, giving seeds (and therefore flowers) only once in its lifespan.

To round off the year and your efforts at flower gardening, don't despair as there are many winter blooms available. Amaryllis, Hyacinth, and Narcissus are a few of the more common known flowers and are available in bulb form. If you want something a little more out of the ordinary, you could always try Winter Jasmine, or Winter Honeysuckle.

So, take heart, take plenty of notes, plan, and buy to your heart's content. By the end of it all you truly will have a flower for every season, and your flower gardening efforts will be rewarded most bountifully.

How to Attract Butterflies to Your Garden

To attract butterflies to your garden, you need the flowers that produce the nectar that butterflies drink. Nectar is the butterfly?s main source of food. To raise butterflies in your garden you need to grow the plants that caterpillars eat.

A butterfly butterfly garden needs:

  • Host plants for caterpillars.
  • Nectar plants for adults.
  • Abundant sunshine.
  • Wet sand or mud puddles in shady nooks.
  • Shelter from high winds.
  • An environment kept healthy through the absence of insecticides.

 

 
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