On Growing Gardens And Picking Flowers

January 28th, 2010 | by |

Growing a garden with brilliantly colored, fragrant flowers is a point of pride for many homeowners. As you look down the street and see everyone’s nice handiwork, it doesn’t take long before you begin to desire a garden of your own. How do they stay so beautiful all year long? How much work is involved? How do you know which flowers to choose and whether your soil is healthy or not? There are many points to consider, but don’t feel overwhelmed. There are many sources of gardening advice available on the web.

Those with little gardening experience will often opt to transplant annuals that have already been grown at a nursery. This is a quick-fix garden for the front yard if you’re hurrying to catch up with the neighbors. You may also try container gardening from seed as an experiment. Once the containers fill with blooms, you can bring them out to the front yard. Some people garden rather extensively with containers and place them all next to one another, so you see a full garden, rather than the individual pots. Petunias, marigolds, begonias, geraniums, impatiens, pansies, petunias and salvia are popular varieties. A good place to start is at www.backyardgardener.com/annual/index.html, where you can learn which annuals will endure in cold weather, endure in heat, grow in poor soil, have a short bloom season, can be sown in the fall and are best for your soil type.

If you’re up for more of a challenge when growing a garden, or if you just don’t want to deal with replanting every season, then you can try perennial flower gardening. A perennial flower typically lives for three to five seasons before needing to be replaced. Most perennials bloom for just one to three weeks once a year, so timing is everything when growing plants like these. Popular perennials include lilies, asters, chrysanthemums, daisies, columbine, coral bells, foxglove, gladioluses, hibiscuses, hostas, hyacinths, larkspurs, poppies, primroses, sunflowers, verbenas and violets. Longer blooming perennials can last two to four months, which include yarrow, bellflower,red valerian, gaillardia (blanket flowers), fringed bleeding hearts, blazing stars, black-eyed Susan, spiderworts, stonecrops and pin cushion flowers.

A gardening expert will tell you that soil preparation is the most important part of growing a garden successfully. Without the proper nutrients, aeration and soil composition, your flowers will surely flop. Each flower has different soil requirements, whether it is acidic or alkaline, so it’s best to test your soil before you begin so you know what you’re dealing with. For instance, marigolds, verbenas and calliopsis will tolerate acidic soils, whereas impatiens, zinnias, nasturtiums and candytufts prefer a more neutral, alkaline soil. To ensure that your soil drains well, you will need to assess whether your soil is composed of clay, sand or loam. You’ll need to add a mixture of compost and manure to your soil, working it down about 4 inches to create a healthy ecosystem for your plants and their beneficial microorganism pals.

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