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Growing Petunias Tips and Ideas

 

How To Choose Garden Flowers

You will want flowers for cutting and flowers for contributing gaiety and charm to your grounds. The aim of the successful gardener is to have a succession of flowers from early spring to late fall.

You can plan from the beginning to have perennials which bloom at different seasons, (for example, iris, which has the peak of its bloom just as the peony season begins).

Know accurately when the perennials bloom and then plan to fill in the gaps left by their passing with prolific and quick-growing annuals. You can plan to have a potting bed, perhaps in your vegetable garden or in a sheltered spot behind your tool house or garage, where you can grow extra annuals as well as those perennials which do not mind being transplanted. Then when the tulip season passes, for example, you can fill in with another tall bulb, a summer-flowering one, such as, perhaps, the canna lily.

Your plan should be made on paper, with the shape of the bed or border sketched in, and the position of the plants indicated. Perhaps one of the most common and feasible design for the average 60 x 100 foot lot, or even the half-acre lot is a border running the length and rear wall of the back yard. This can be a mixed border of summer-flowering bulbs, perennials and annuals, backed by shrubs.

Other designs can be planned for the center of the lawn, for the foundation planting, for the pathways to the house and for the sides of the house. Semi-formal or formal gardens can have borders or beds laid out alongside of and divided by walks.

In planning your border, provide for tall screening plants that will form a background for the shorter plants. The screening plants may need staking but they should be sturdy. If you have a wide border, over 6 feet, you will need a narrow path in front of the screening plants for cultivating and tending. The centre border plants are of medium height, and can be chosen for vivid colour. If you are planning a wide border, relatively tall plants such as iris go here. In the foreground is your edging, composed of such neat and plainly visible flowers as: clipped green perennials, or low-growing petunia, ageratum, pansies, dwarf marigolds or sweet alyssum. It is wise in planning to have beds or borders that are visible from your windows and close to your terraces and gathering places outdoors.

The special planting set close to the house is called foundation planting and has great importance since it improves and enhances the proportions of your house as well as relates the house to the grounds.

Evergreens are widely used for foundation planting not only because they can thrive in the shade of the house, but because of their year-round good looks.

If you have not used evergreens elsewhere, though, it is a mistake to suddenly use them at the foundation. The contrast will be too sharp; the evergreens are apt to look forbidding. There remains a wide choice of flowering shrubs, dwarf fruit trees, roses and cushion chrysanthemums that will lend colour to your foundation design in spring, summer and fall. Japanese red leaf barberry, floribunda roses, flowering quince and forsythia are among the bushes and plants that can be used.

While it is tempting to try one of each of the nursery's evergreen specimens in your foundation planting, this should, of course, be avoided. On the other hand, contrast tall and low-growing types: use stiff-needled pines with feathery juniper with broadleaved laurel and rhododendron.

In your preliminary planning, draw to scale the relationship between your house elevation and the foundation shrubs and trees as they will look at mature height. Perhaps some of those you've selected will be too tall for your house, obscuring your windows and making the house gloomy inside. In that case, you don't want them.

In general, because your entrance is the most important feature of your house facade, you start your planning with it in mind, using shrubs that direct the eye toward the door. The planting in front of the house is usually bowl-shaped in its overall outline. This gives the impression of a broad base to the house. In some places, let the wall show to the foundation. Put the tallest shrubbery at the corners of your house.


Gregg Hall is a business consultant and author for many online and offline businesses and lives in Navarre Florida. Get flowers delivered at http://www.flowers-delivered-plus.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


how do u........?
grow petunias in ur belly button?

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Has anyone ever grown Surfinias?
I have experience of growing Petunias: are Surfinias the same? What kind of conditions do they need? How prolifically do they flower?

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growing petunias?
pinching back or pruning a petunia

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do pettelized seeds really work?? i had planted petunias and they didnt come up.. help!!?
the seeds sort of turned into a mush after a couple of days ..i had taken care not to over water ..how do i grow petunias ,especially from petellized seeds ,how do i wtr then and can i start them indoors...and wat weather do they grow in best?? thanx for any help

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Do y'all have any luck growing petunias?
I'm usually a pretty fair gardener but when it comes to petunias, I have 10 brown thumbs! They either get leggy--meaning I deadhead them and end up with long stalks of pinched stems--or they wilt and get all sticky. A friend once told me they HAD "the wilt" but the people at the nursery didn't know what that meant, let alone what to do about it. I'd love to have lush baskets or window boxes full of petunias, and I feel like a complete bonehead for not being able to figure out how to get them. Does anybody have any suggestions? thanks. Forgot to mention I'm in South Texas, zone 9. I know petunias will grow here--just not for me.

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why does anything and everything have to revolve around the bible?
i was raised catholic and believe in jesus and god and all that stuff, but why do i keep finding all of these answers bible fitted, or almost quoted from the bible? even if its a question about a computer program or tips on growing petunias? no disrespect but isnt it annoying? shouldnt there be a line between church and state? relying on the bible to make character driven decisions for you?

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how to grow petunias from seed and dahlia's (tuberous root)?
i have 2 window boxes, 6in x 22in,n 5 1/2in deep and 1 large round pot, 13 1/2in in diameter, and about 12in deep. i didnt realize when i bought the dahlias that they grow so big. now i'm thinking of putting them into the large round pot, and the petunias in the boxes. so can i put all three dahlia roots in the one big pot? and for the petunia seeds how do i start them? just throw them in the dirt or on a wet paper towel covered with plastic or what? i've got the miracle grow potting soil, do i need anything else? also i live in central south dakota, so do i start now or wait a lil longer, or should i have started sooner? my potting mix and the large round container with dirt from previous plants have been in the garage,and are cold should i let my dirt warm up first before i do anything?

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how to grow petunias in southern california?


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Will a heat mat speed up these slow growing Petunia seedlings that I started 7 weeks ago?
They have germinated and are under lights but they are still only 1/4 inch in height. I planted them in peat pellets and germinated them on a heat mat. Will keeping them on the heat speed them up? Is there anything else I can do to help them grow a little faster. They are getting 16 hours of light daily.

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Why are Petunias so hard to grow from seed? Also, what is a good way to grow petunias from seed?
I have tried and failed several times to grow Petunias from seed. I live in Townsville, Australia by the way, NOT in America. Anyway, I have tried putting Petunia seeds into a pot with good drainage soil and not covering the petunia seeds up with soil again and putting some clear wrap over the pot to create a green house effect and that wont work. So what is a good way to start Petunia seeds off? It is Winter her by the way but here we don't get freezing cold temperatures and we still get a good amount of sunlight during the day. Because it is winter it is not blazing hot here. Please help. Maybe I didn't make it quite clear when I said that I AM NOT COVERING THE PETUNIA SEEDS WITH SOIL!

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