Container Flower Gardening offers Versatility and Creativity
Do you love the look and fragrance of freshly blooming flowers, but lack the space for a garden bed of your own? The solution may lie in container flower gardening that can be done almost anywhere from the lanai of the high rise apartment to the narrow walkway leading to the door of a townhome. Container flower gardening is also a beautiful and fun way to add color to a porch or patio of any home. All that is required is a container or two of your preference, some potting soil, and enough plants to fill that container with color and fragrance.
Choosing a Container
The really fun thing about container flower gardening is that the containers that you select to use can be almost anything that has enough depth and drainage to house your plants. There are plenty of options at your local nursery or home center. Keep in mind that any of these pots will have their advantages and disadvantages, however. For example, terracotta pots can dry out quickly, which means that you must water plants frequently. Plastic is another popular material, but it does not hold up as well under the suns UV rays. Ceramic pots can be beautiful but require plenty of drainage, and wood containers can eventually rot. You can also go with the unusual, using an old wagon or even a rain boot to house your plants. Just make sure that you provide drainage and care for your plants accordingly, no matter what type of container you choose.
Selecting Plants for your Container Flower Gardening Design
Plant selection is the next step in your container flower garden, and this should also be done by choosing flowers that will do particularly well in containers. If your pots are going to be left on the ground, select a couple of taller plants for the center, like spikes or tall flowering varieties. Fill in around the outside with shorter blooming plants, like zinnias or marigolds, and include a few that will cascade down the side of the pot like some species of petunias or ivies. When designing a container flower garden, it is best to choose a single color scheme and stick with it, such as red and yellow flowers, or orange and purple. Some will enjoy a red, white a blue theme to display for the Fourth of July season, or gold and burgundy offerings for a fall display.
Container flower gardening will allow you to unleash your creativity and your green thumb in a host of offerings to adorn your porch or patio. Get your creative juices flowing by planning your own container flower gardening scheme, and enjoy the beautiful colors and fragrances of your efforts, no matter where you live.
However, this furniture is not very durable and can grow mold on it during wet weather.
Gardening Hibiscus
Keep the plant spacing according to what is given in the instructions on the label of the plant, or what you have learned from a reference book on gardening.
For example, amethyst altilbe is available as a low growing plant with beautiful lavender blossoms that deer are not particularly fond of eating. In order to ensure that your plants will achieve a stair step effect, with shorter plants in the front and taller varieties in the back, you must look at the size that the plants will grow to be and not their size when you purchase them. Go to your local garden center and make your choices.
|