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Flower Gardening Resources


Summer Flower Garden Provides Seasonal Decoration


There is little that is more satisfying to a homeowner then to look outside their home and see their summer flower garden bursting with color. Whether it is an area lining the driveway, sitting along side their basement walls or setting in the middle of a mound of mulch-covered dirt in the front yard, a summer flower garden can be the anticipated result of hard work following a drab winter.

Most people will use annual plants in their summer flower garden giving them the option of changing the color of the plants each year. Typical summer flowers such as impatiens and petunias, available in a rainbow of color, are often bought as small growing plants and set in the prepared soil, one at a time, to the specific design of the homeowner. However, some have no plan other than an approximation of how many flowers they will plant, figuring the more the better.

With many species of flowers, there are varieties that grow tall and those that remain closer to the ground and they are often planted with the taller ones in the back, possibly of a different color, to create the feeling the plants are growing bigger as they progress to the back of the summer flower garden. Rarely will annual plants be mixed in one small bed, rather if the homeowner wished to use different types of flowers, they will have different flowerbeds.

Mixing Early Blooms Can Keep Color Longer

One method often used by lawn lovers is to plant a few spring flower bulbs, such as tulips or daffodils in the summer flower garden beds that will flower the earliest. Following the blooming of these plants, they set their annuals into the ground to help maintain a flow of color in the area. A few lavender crocuses in the summer flower garden, mixed with the same color of impatiens can keep the bed sparkling throughout the entire season.

Although there are others who will mix their annual plants to provide a different look, although care should be exercised so as not to overgrow a small flower bed. Petunias, for example, have varieties that grow tall as well as short, while another variety, a wave petunia tends to have its vine crawl across the ground. Mixing these with other annuals in a summer flower garden may allow the crawling vine to choke the other plants.

Whether the homeowner is the type to plan out the summer flower garden down to the last detail, or the type that brings the best looking plants home from the store and plugs them into the ground, a summer flower garden can add color to the yard and show people they really care about appearances.

Before you draw-up your rose garden design, you need to take measurements of your available garden space.

About Eating Flower Blossoms

Probably your best bet in finding flower gardening catalogs is to go online because there are many sites that send free copies of their catalogs when you submit a request to them using their website.

A formal white flower garden is exactly what it sounds like. You can also add a few rocks in the bottom for stability and additional drainage. Of course, the internet can also be of help. when the flowers are in bloom, the effect can be as stunning as a checkerboard at midnight.