Perennials and Herbs Outdoor Container Gardening

June 20, 2008 · Print This Article

In every container garden a person should have herbaceous perennials considering they have some beautiful flowers and distinctive foliage and you can keep them in raised beds, planters and large boxes.

These plants are very permissive considering they tolerate both sun or shade and can grow in moist and dry locations. Even whether they are very resistant some of them need winter covering.

The best perennials have all-season foliage. Once they finish flowering, astilbe, coral-bells, daylilies, phlox, gas plant, peonies and hardy candytuft their leaves still appealing. When the blooming period is by the leaves of primroses, bleeding hearts and oriental poppies turn yellow.

While daylilies and iris love hot temperatures, the delphiniums, lupines, and astilbes thrive in cool temperatures.

If you’re a gardener you can have too foxgloves, cantetbury bells, biennials, verbascums and sweet williams and discard them after flowering.

For colourful effects, these days you can buy mature perennial and biennial plants in tar paper, baskets, tins, papiermache and other temporary containers from any garden centre and nurserymen.

Acanthus (Bear’s Breech) has two feet expanded, arching, shining dark green, thistlelike, deep-cut leaves are covered with white, tall, rose-tinged spikes. You must plant them in large pots with full sun and good drainage but whether you live in North you must probably need to protect it during the winter.

Asters are very beautiful plants with starry blossoms in colours of rich purple, rose and lavender, pink and white autumn. that plant can grow from nine inches up to four feet. You must supply it with full sun, water it and divide them each spring.

The Bearded Iris has very beautiful blooms coloured like the rainbow and spearlike leaves. It is a resistant plant and you must divide them every third year.

Chrysanthemums are considered to be invaluable for the pot garden that will last from August to December. It is very easy to grow it your own but whether that is not possible you can buy it in bud from commercial growers.

You must keep them moist and whether you do that you can easily move them when in bloom. After that you

can plant them in your garden and protect them during the winter or discard the roots year after year.

Daylilies or Hemerocallis are growing in both hot and cold climates or shade or full sun. You must know that strap foliage is appealing the entire year. whether you live in warmer regions you must know that there are evergreen varieties for you to choose from. Yellow and crimson trumpet flowers last for a distant period even whether each bloom is fresh for only one day. In Greek, hemerocallis is translated “beautiful for a day”.

Delphinium is a regal plant with tall, stately spikes in shades of blue white and purple. You must plant the seeds in February or March for flowering plants the same season or you can sow the seeds in spring for large containers. whether you sow them in June or July they will bloom the next summer. that plant requires sunlight. You can always go and buy a few amazing Pacific Hybrids.

Hostas have green or variegated broad leaves and the low growing types are perfect for edge large planters. That’s mainly considering that is a resistant and pest free plant. A few Hostas types are: Honey-bells that have tall spikes of purple flowers; August lily with fragrant white bells in summer; and Thomas Hogg, with green leaves edged white.

Phlox is a dependable for bright colours in July, August and September. that plant will grow perfectly in sun or partial shade and it requires plenty of water. Phlox wilts and the lower leaves dry out and turn brown.

This flower is available in various colours: purple, salmon, pink, red, scarlet, rose, lavender and white. When plants are six to nine inches high and the tips are pinched, flower heads will be smaller but more numerous.

Rose Mallow or Hibiscus are well-known for bold, tall effects and have big rose, red, pink and white flowers. The hybrids can measure around nine inches across and need moisture, rich soil and full sun though partial shade.

[Source] The Survey Survival Network Blogs

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