Backyard Activities Articles
Choosing and Planting Perennials
If you’ve been growing a vegetable garden for a while, you
might be feeling slightly disgruntled at how plain it is to
look at. I too began my gardening career with a vegetable
garden, but I decided that it wasn’t quite as pleasing to look
at as I would have liked. I heard from a friend that the use of
perennial flowers could be a great way to liven up my garden
without adding any extra work for me.
Perennial flowers are strong, local flowers that come back
every year without having to replant or do any extra work.
During their off seasons, the flowers and stems die back and
you can hardly even tell the plant is there (rather than just
dying and looking like hideous brown clumps in your garden).
When it’s time to bloom, entirely new flowers shoot up where
the old ones were.
Before deciding whether to put in perennials or not, you
need to make sure that your soil has proper drainage. If the
water stays saturated for long periods of time, you should
build a raised bed. To test, dig a hole and fill it with water.
Wait a day, and then fill it with water again. All traces of
water should be gone within 10 hours. If the hole isn’t
completely dry, you will need to build a raised bed.
Picking your perennials can be a complicated process. The
goal should be to have them flowering as much as possible
during the year, so you should create an outline of the year.
Research the different types of flower you want, and create a
timeline of flowering. If you plan it right, you can have a
different type of flower blooming at any point in the year.
Getting just the right mixture of seeds can give your yard a
constantly changing array of colors.
When you go to buy the seeds from your local florist or
nursery, you might be able to find a custom seed mixture for
your area. This takes the really tough research part out of the
job. Usually these blends are optimized for the local climate,
and do great jobs of having flowers always grow in your yard.
If one of these isn’t available, you can ask the employees what
they think would be a good mixture. They should be happy to
help you put something together which will be optimal for
whatever you desire.
You should definitely use mulch when planting perennials.
This will reduce the overall amount of work you have to do, by
reducing the amount of weeds and increasing the water
retention. Bark or pine needles work great, I have found, and
depending on the rest of your yard you might have them on hand
at no charge. As for fertilizer, you should use it sparingly
once your plants start to come to life.
When you actually go to plant the seeds, you should put them
in small, separate clumps according to the directions. This is
because they tend to spread out, and if you have too many too
close together then they will end up doing nothing but choking
each other out. As you plant them, throw in a little bit of
extremely weak fertilizer. In no time at all you should start
to see flowers blooming up.
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