Sunday, 14 August 2011

Flowers, lamps for beautiful container gardening


As a group, are outstanding plants flower Lantern-colorful, flashy and generally easy to grow for container gardens. Many evergreen foliage, with others, leaves mature flowering and stored bulbs and started again, year after year. Some flower bulbs, giving Hardy, others, though, and is Hardy, in a particular area of winter temperature averages. In cold areas giving types-bigonias tuberosa "and" Lily "and" gloxinias-can be treated like summer in container gardens. This gives the gardener variety grow spring the earliest late autumn.

Dutch flower bulbs include Crooks, snoodrobs, aranthis or akonitis winter, tcionodoxas, liokogoms hiasinths grapes, Silas or snowflakes, Dutch hiasinths, narcissus, Skagit, pride of the northern spring gardens. Though Hardy did not adapt to outdoor garden containers where the temperature drops below freezing. They need protection from the cold cellar or fold or cold frame. You can also dig a trench in the Earth for winter gardening pots covered with cover of Marsh hay or straw. Temperatures do not go below zero, could leave the Dutch Flower Lantern outdoor winter gardening pots.

For better results, start fresh container Garden, stable, large flower bulbs each fall. Ensure good drainage at the bottom of each pot gardens and use light soil with bone meal added. If you are in total pot, sink during moist peat moss in ruteng to prevent rapid drying. If this happens frequently, would hit poor roots and flowers. When weather permits after risk passes freeze, your container garden outside the flower or nursery row until you reach the stage of infancy. After blooming, move your container garden can mature leaves unseen.

Fragrance, focuses on the Dutch hiasinths, excellent bedding plantations raised beds or boxes. Narcissus looks good combined on large trees or shrubs, Berks, weforsithias. Tulips official in nature, combining delightfully with wall flowers, violas Trinity district, margoeritis, wekanditoft English daisies in container gardens.

As already indicated, is protected by Dutch flower bulbs planted in pots or small window boxes and left outdoors in cold areas for winter. It can, however, provided in large farmers and boxes and deep enough to fit a lot of soil. Garden pots should be 1.5 to two feet deep and about two feet wide. Assy flower with at least six inches of soil, planting them early enough in the autumn so that root growth can make before freezing solid soil. In the porch in New York City Gardens, Dutch lamps have grown successfully in this way, but always a threat. It makes no difference whether the garden pots made of wood or cement or other material and the quantity of soil have that counts.

In fact, not freezing soil injured Lantern flower (this occurs in open ground), but the pressure and counter pressure on two sides by frost, containers and fixed. As a result, lamps and flowers bruises and rushed from soil and roots torn. Hardy flower bulbs where freezing never hard enough, but the cold weather, can be grown successfully in small container garden.

Here is a partial list of flower bulbs that bloom in the gardens of the container. Will help you design your container garden

Achiminis excess warmth loving plants with clean sheets, tubular flowers in blue, lavender, red and white. Related African, gloxinias weviolates beautiful window boxes and hanging baskets or pots garden tables or shelves or wall brackets. Start small tubers indoors and slick give plants protected with protection from strong winds and Sun. Old backup achiminis in the South, it is more frequent.

Agabanthos or Lila Blue Nile green, fleshy plant roots with strap, often grown in tubs and urns on the terraces during summer, steps when unfolding tall blue spikes. Culture easily, but requires flora weillaitid, Frost proof room or greenhouse in winter. This favorite llanthrobologeine, often seen in gardens of Europe. Flower lamp is ideal for container gardening.

Calla shuai, planting outdoors in warmer areas, but a bowl bid in the North. Familiar with most major papers is white, shiny, heart-shaped. Start the bulbs indoors in February or March in rich soil, and when settled weather, large pots to gardening and outdoors. Lily do well in full sun or part shade, are heavy feeders and require much water. There are also yellow delicious one with white spotted leaves. Rest your flower bulbs after leaves mature and grow again.

Colorful and free flowering Dahlias providing bloom. Cut the most. You can grow tall types, large flowering only in squares and large farmers, but dwarfs, even the most liberal flowering, excellent small garden containers. Reach length forward 2 years, grows easily from tubers in soil medium shade or partial Sun. Raised from seeds grown indoors in February. If the stored tubers in peat or sand in cool, where evidence of frost, can be cultivated for years. Check the lights during the winter, and if shriviling, spray lightly.

Gladiolus, summer flowering plants such as the spear and leaves many colour mutations. It can park corms in containers outdoors after Frost danger is passed. Set of six inches along with four and six inches deep. The best way to use this gardening container plant every two or three weeks, giving you a succession bloom in your container garden. Danger stems before open flowers. After leaving Brown, or starts a frost, tree felling and corms and dust with DDT to control small trips suck. After spraying, store the corms in dry place at 45 to 55 degrees Fahrenheit for future planting.

Gloxinias another summer flower and plant with large, tender flowering in vitro of rostis velvety red and pink, lavender, purple, or white and Broadleaf. Start the tubers indoors and not take off until warmer weather. It lets easily breaking or injury by wind or rain, plants in protected spot. Eaves Broad contemporary houses with low sun, provide an appropriate setting restricted to rows of pots and window boxes filled with gay gloxinias.

Now you have some great ideas for designing your own container garden. It is now time to start planting flower bulbs.

Happy gardening container!

Copyright © 2006 Mary Hanna, all rights reserved.

This article may be distributed freely on your website and your ezines, as long as this article has not changed the entire copyright notice and links and resources of the Fund.







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