T O P I C R E V I E W |
brightmeadow |
Posted - Aug 14 2007 : 5:20:41 PM So, I'm looking at all the beautiful flowers near my patio and lamenting that soon enough they will be fading, and I'm wondering what I could plant now that would be: 1. not too expensive (not buying 15 big container plants at $20 each!) 2. Perennial (I love perennials - don't have to replant every year)
So, I like those big cushion mums, but are they perennials? and how do they look in between the daffodils in the spring?
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands - You shall be happy and it shall be well with you. -Psalm 128.2 Visit my blog at http://brightmeadowfarms.blogspot.com ,web site store at http://www.watkinsonline.com/fish or my homepage at http://home.earthlink.net/~brightmeadow |
3 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Love-in-a-Mist |
Posted - Aug 15 2007 : 4:47:01 PM Mine usually don't look so good when they come back again. I bought 2 from an expensive nursery last year that are doing well. Better quality I'm guessing and I planted them in half shade.
http://diaryofafarmerswife.blogspot.com/ |
ddmashayekhi |
Posted - Aug 15 2007 : 09:35:27 AM Check to make sure you are buying the perennial type mum. There's a lot of hot house varieties at Home Depot that look beautiful now, but they are just an annual. I've been able to get mums to come back at my old house without a problem, but no such luck here. This yard is much more shadier, so I think that's my problem. Perennials are being clearanced out right now, so you can get some pretty good deals. Just check to make sure they're not too root bound in their containers.
Dawn in IL |
KYgurlsrbest |
Posted - Aug 15 2007 : 06:09:32 AM Hm. Sometimes they are and sometimes they aren't--I've had luck with them coming back several years in a row and then the just "poof" disappear.
They're not so pretty after they've bloomed and settled through the winter, so I cut them back to the ground.
Where you and I are, Brenda, they might come back for you. J
"She was built like a watch, a study in balance ... with a neck and head so refined, like a drawing by DaVinci"... NY Newsday sportswriter Bill Nack describing filly, Ruffian. |
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