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Information
about how to grow flowers in your flower garden
Introduction
Whilst
we may commonly think of a few dozen types of
flowers that we typically grow, there are actually
hundreds, if not thousands, of different varieties.
Each species may have dozens of varieties and
that's good, because gardeners like to try and
grow new and unique varieties.
Flower
Garden Design Basics
When it comes to garden design, it's mostly up
to you. Sure, it's important to do a good job
of soil preparation and carefully match plants
to the site. If you ignore these imperatives,
your results will likely be disappointing.
The
aesthetics, however, are more a matter of personal
preference. You might prefer a formal looking
flower garden with straight edged beds and plants
in orderly patterns. Or you might prefer a more
natural look with sweeping curves and irregular
clumps of plants. The styles you choose are up
to you.
The
flower garden tips below avoid as much as possible
the prescriptive "shoulds" that dominate
advice about garden design. Instead, they'll point
out the aesthetic consequences of different strategies.
Remember that, in most cases, there is more than
one way to arrange plants, and that many of the
"rules" of garden design were made to
be broken. What's important is that your garden
look good to you.
Match
plants to the sun in your flower garden
Break this rule at your own peril. Different plants
need different amounts of light. Most candidates
for flower gardens prefer full sun (6 or more
hours of direct sun each day). Others need full-
or part-shade. Some plants may grow fine in the
shade but flower garden better in full sun.
Read
flower growing guides for more information
on sunlight requirements of each kind of flower.
Pay
attention to soil needs in your flower garden
This is the other unbreakable rule. Most garden
plants need well-drained soil. Unless you are
going to limit yourself to plants that can tolerate
boggy soil conditions, avoid locating flower gardens
where there is standing water after heavy rains
or during the spring thaw. Prepare soil well in
advance of planting -- preferably in fall for
planting the following spring.
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Where
to plant?
Plant flower garden beds where you can see them.
Especially consider the views from private outdoor
spaces such as patios, decks, and terraces. Don't
forget about how the beds will look when viewed
through windows from inside the house. Also consider
how neighbours and passers by will see your gardens.
Trees
are tough
One of the most tempting places to put your flower
garden is around the base of a mature tree. This
is one of the most difficult places to grow flowers,
however, because of the deep shade and intense
competition for moisture and nutrients from tree
roots. Very few plants will thrive here -- with
the exception of some tough, competitive groundcovers.
Start
a sketch
Now might be a good time to start sketching your
flower garden design plans on paper. Start with
the footprint of your house. Add the garage, other
buildings, driveway, walks, fences, and patios.
Sketch in existing trees and other plantings.
Indicate which way is north on your sketch so
that you become more aware of how much sun different
places receive. For example, areas close to the
north sides of buildings get little direct sun.
Consider
the slope
A flower garden is easiest to establish on level
or slightly sloping ground. Steep slopes pose
special problems, especially protecting soil from
erosion. They may require terracing if you want
to create flowerbeds without losing soil. Such
slopes might also be good candidates for a tough,
spreading, mat-forming groundcover. Some steep
slopes might be ideal sites for rock gardens.
Indicate steep slopes on your sketch.
Foundation
plantings for your flower garden
Many homes are girdled by often-overgrown evergreen
shrubs. With older homes, the purpose of these
plantings was to hide ugly foundations and basement
windows. Most newer homes lack ugly foundations,
but many still sport the shrubs -- more out of
tradition than anything else. Consider removing
some of these shrubs and using the space occupied
by foundation plantings for flower garden beds
or mixed plantings, or creating beds in front
of the shrubs.
Borders
and islands
Returning to your flower garden sketch, look for
likely spots for creating new flower beds. These
may be border beds, tied along one edge to a building,
fence, or walkway. Or they may be island beds,
carved out of the middle of the lawn.
Background
Before you pencil in potential bed locations,
consider the background. Most plantings benefit
from a background to provide some visual contrast
to the plants. Buildings, fences, hedges, or a
row of evergreen trees can keep the plants from
just melting into the existing landscape. Growing
vines on a fence can give that background an interesting
texture. With island beds, larger plants in the
center of the flower garden bed can provide a
background for other plants. One caution: Solid
backgrounds can restrict airflow and increase
disease problems if plants are spaced too close
together.
How
wide?
In a small yard with limited space, 2- to 3-foot-wide
borders may make the most sense. The rule of thumb
for traditional English perennial borders is that
they need to be at least 6 to 8 feet wide to accommodate
the range of plants needed to provide varying
heights and continuous bloom. (If shrubs are used
as a background at the rear of the flower garden
bed, allow at least two feet between them and
the perennials for good airflow and access for
maintenance.) If the cottage gardening bug bites
you, you might find your beds expanding to take
up most if not all of the yard, with just a few
footpaths or stepping stones winding through.
But you need not feel restricted by either of
these traditional garden styles. Feel free to
try the range of options that fall between these
two.
What
shape?
The beds in a formal flower garden usually has
straight edges that are easier to maintain. But
some gardeners find these dull. Gently curving
edges provide a less formal look and give the
bed the illusion that it is longer than it really
is. At the other end of the spectrum, sharply
scalloped edges are harder to maintain and mow
around. Some gardeners find such complicated edges
distracting.
Edging
Use a garden hose to mark the edge of your bed
before you create it. It's not a bad idea to leave
it in place for a few days to give you time to
work around it, view it from different angles
while envisioning the plants, and adjusting the
boundary. You can also mark the edge with flour,
lime, or landscape paint. Pencil beds into your
sketch. Plan
your flower garden to maintain the boundary between
lawn and flowerbed by edging with a flat spade,
half-moon edger, or weed-trimmer. You can also
work a variety of edging materials into your plan,
including products made from metal or plastic,
bricks, field stones, or pavers.
Plant
height
Now it's time to start sketching which plants
might go where in your beds. Most gardeners arrange
plants in beds with the tallest plants in the
rear and the smallest toward the front. If you
are designing a flower garden bed to be viewed
from a window, this might mean having the shorter
plants closer to the house. Similarly, island
beds usually have tall plants in the center and
smaller plants toward the edges.
A general
plan might include plants that are less than 1
foot tall in the front third of the bed, plants
that are greater than 3 feet tall in the rear
third of the bed, and plants between 1 and 3 feet
tall in the center third of the bed. Don't adhere
to these guidelines too rigidly unless you want
your garden to look like stair steps in profile.
You can bring some of the taller plants forward
and plant some of the shorter plants further back
of the flower garden to create a more varied topography.
To
create a smooth gradation of heights, the tallest
plants should be no taller than about two-thirds
the width of the bed, or half the width of the
bed in the case of island beds.
Plan
for constant color and interest
Choose plants so that your garden offers color
and interest throughout the growing season and
even in winter. Spring-flowering bulbs are good
for early color. Herbaceous perennials have specific
times during the growing season when they flower,
ranging from one to as much as six weeks. Many
annuals, once they start flowering, continue to
bloom until fall frost. (A few even continue after
frost.)
As
you continue to sketch your flower garden plan,
note when you expect each species to bloom. Many
successful designs start with penciling in fall-flowering
plants or plants that provide winter interest,
as these are often neglected in garden plans.
Then work back through the seasons to fill in
with summer- and spring-flowering plants. Also
plan for pleasing combinations of color.
Foliage
and form
Spectacular blooms grab our attention, but don't
ignore the rest of the plant in your planning.
Many plants have foliage that adds color and interesting
visual textures to the garden. [See Flower Gardens:
Texture.] Plants also come in a variety of shapes
(also called form or habit). Some plants grow
into cushions, mounds, or clumps. Others are upright
and spiky. Still others are round and bushy. Some
gardeners mix these different forms in close proximity
for a varied effect. Others group plants with
similar forms in the flower garden together.
Arrangement
In formal gardens, plants are usually arranged
in rows or other regular patterns. In informal
gardens, they can be in clumps (a circular group
of three or more plants) or drifts (an elongated
grouping of plants). Clumps and drifts are most
often planted with an odd number of the same kind
of plant to give the appearance of a more natural
grouping.
Planting
groups of the same kind of plant in clumps or
drifts provides more visual impact than planting
a single plant, unless the plant is large enough
and spectacular enough to hold interest by itself.
(These are called specimen plants.) For example,
a single cut-leaf Japanese maple can have a dramatic
impact in an ornamental planting. A single zinnia,
on the other hand, won't attract much attention
in your flower garden.
Alternating
individual plants with flowers of different colors
in a rigid pattern (red, white, red, white ...
) in close proximity can have a jarring effect.
Repeating a plant or color in several places along
a border, however, can add cohesiveness to a seemingly
random planting.
Other
plants
Many flower gardeners rely on herbaceous perennials
as the backbone for their plantings, using spring-flowering
bulbs for early color and annual flowers to fill
in gaps. Don't feel limited by such orthodoxy.
Many gardeners also incorporate evergreen or flowering
shrubs and small trees into their flower garden.
These are especially helpful for providing fall
color and winter interest. Ornamental grasses
-- from the very tall to the very short -- can
provide background, form, texture, and fall and
winter interest. Many vegetables and herbs provide
a double bonus, being pleasing to both the eye
and the palate.
Specialty
gardens
You may decide at some point to specialize in
a particular type of gardening. For example, rock
gardeners specialize in growing plants (many of
them native to alpine regions) that thrive in
gravelly, well-drained soils. Other gardeners
have particular interest in growing plants that
attract butterflies or hummingbirds.
Fascinated
by particular ecosystems, some gardeners create
water gardens, bog gardens, prairie gardens, or
woodland gardens. Those focused on different plant
uses create herb gardens, fragrance flower garden,
cut-flower gardens, or edible landscapes. Others
create authentic gardens reflecting the traditions
of another culture -- the Japanese meditation
garden, for example.
You
may decide to incorporate some or all of these
into your own garden, creating your own unique
style. After all, that's what gardening is all
about.
an
article about designing a garden with flowers
an
article about keeping your garden safe
end
of information about how to grow flowers in your
flower garden
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