Easy Flowers to Grow
You can count on these simple flowers to grow beautifully in your garden, it will be colorful and beautiful from spring to frost. Looking for flowers that are easy to grow? Reliable plants that you can find here will add lasting color and reliable interest to your garden, even if you only have a little time to set aside for them.
Flowers that are easy to grow = less work for you
The plants here are easy to maintain, take on difficult conditions, and do not require much special attention, but there are some things you can do to guarantee that they work best.
Add mulch after planting
Once these easy-to-grow flowers fall to the ground, spread a 2 to 3-inch layer of organic mulch-like bark chips to protect them from moisture. Although it can handle dry weather and soil plants, it also helps maintain very flowering and healthy foliage throughout the season. Place the mulch 3 to 4 inches away from the crown or at the point where the stems emerge from the soil so the plant does not get too wet and rot. In addition to helping to retain more moisture, mulch also reduces how often you need to water.
Be sure to compost
These easy blooms will bloom a lot, so be sure to give them plenty of nutrients. What your body needs to stay fuel-efficient and active - food! To make sure your plants have plenty of what they need to grow and be beautiful, scrape a compost on the soil surface or apply a slow release of compost once in the spring. On the other hand, do not worry too much - if you forget and do not follow a close and regular fertilizing schedule, these easy flowers will grow well. Check out how some of the easiest and most reliable flowers you can welcome in your garden in the gallery below.
➤ BENEFICIAL INSECTS - HOW TO ATTRACT THEM
French marigold (Tagetes patula)
Need a lot of bright flowers on plants that are clean and compact in the hot, dry areas of summer? This is easy with French marigold. It blooms in warm colors like yellow with reddish-orange centers like hot bag fire. They are eye-catching in containers because the edges or piles are where the soil is bad or rocky.
Start sowing seeds within six weeks of the last predicted frost or wait until all the dangers of frost have passed in the spring and sow them to a depth of about.
Geranium (Pelargonium spp. And hybrids)
Use geranium as a floriferous filler in a container or window box, planting a bright edge in front of the border or a colorful mass on a bed. A lot of crops are available as seeds, so it doesn’t have to cost much to get plants for a sweep. Cut-grown geranium is slightly more expensive than seed-grown varieties in the garden center. But they have large, durable flowers. American® Light Pink Splash is a cut-grown variety that grows 12 to 18 inches high and 12 to 15 inches wide above.
Coneflower (Echinacea spp. and hybrids)
Coneflowers are incredibly low maintenance even in hot, dry, humid climates and are covered with flowers from early summer until early autumn. These easy-going flowers are a favorite of pollinators, drawing butterflies and bees until they fade. Later, the dried, conical seeds become an important source of energy for Goldfinches and other birds. The hybrid of the purple native flower (Echinacea purpurea) has formed an array of fragrant yellow 'aloha'-like flowering varieties and colors above. Although conifers are often replanted, the next generation will generally not resemble the mother plant.
Shrub rose (Rosa hybrids)
If you have ever wondered if roses are more caring, let shrub roses change your mind. Give the plants space in full sun - some varieties, such as Knockout®, tolerate even partial shade - and shrub roses will bloom in late summer without careful maintenance or pruning. Plants tolerate hot, humid climates and dry climates. And most cultivars, especially fresh ones, are immune, so you don’t have to worry about powdery mildew or blackheads - two common problems that can dramatically weaken rose health. In addition to excellent immunity, the Carrefour Wonder in the photo has good fall interest. When its double flowers are finished, the reddish-orange hips take their place, and the leaves are shades of yellow.
Daily (Hemorrhoids spp. And hybrids)
Dahlias work well in hot, humid summers and cool winters - some varieties are cool without extra protection. The 'Highland Lord' in the photo is one of the thousands of varieties available in many colors, shapes, and sizes. Although the individual flowers do not last more than a day, there are numerous buds on each stem to extend the show. When all the flowers are done, follow the stem below the clusters of leaves to cut them. It refines the plants and promotes rapid re-flowering in varieties with a second flush.
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