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Many people make unnecessary expenditure to make their patio or lawns attractive. There expenses only make a hole in their pockets. While the outcome obtained by making these expenditures might be attractive, one should consider why he should make unnecessary spending when he can obtain the same beauty by taking another cost effective option. The option that we are talking about here is the flower garden. No matter how big or small you lawn may be, flowers can add a certain charm to it and make it look attractive.
Flower gardens can be cultivated in quick time without much fuss and expenditure of resources. There are some flowers that grow very quickly and are also very beautiful at the same time. If you sow the seeds for these plants in your garden, flowers will grow up faster than you expected. These flowers vary from one region to another depending on the climate of the region.
One method which helps you to know which flowers grow well in your area is searching on the internet. The details obtained on the internet can be so accurate that you will know which flower grows well at what time of the year in your area. Choosing the flowers wisely will see that you garden is full of fresh and new flowers all round the year.
The primary task before you start planting the flower plants is the preparation of the soil. This step must not be neglected at any cost as it influences the normal growth pattern of the flower plants. The next task would be removal of unwanted materials in the garden like weeds and rocks. After this, you can add an adequate quantity of fertilizer to the soil to increase its fertility. When all these steps have been done, your soil is ready for planting.
You can now take all the seedlings and arrange them in the order you want them planted in your garden. It is advisable to plant seedlings requiring more water close to the water source.
Now make some holes in the garden at various spots to plant the seedlings. Take these seedlings and plant them deep into the holes so that they are properly set. After this, cover the seedlings with soil so that the plant is held tightly and add water to the seedlings.
Planting beautiful tulips or daffodils in your garden can make it look attractive and avoid excessive expenditure at the same time.
Foxgloves, delphiniums and hollyhocks provide perfect punctuation points for flowering beds and borders, their candles of flowers accenting many of our coastal gardens. But of all the spiky cottage garden favorites, it is the foxglove that stands alone at the top of the class in local gardens.
A row of delphiniums in full spring bloom is stunning. But all too often in our gardens, the reality is a short-lived, spindly and sparse plant — a far cry from the image that most of us carry in our imaginations of what delphiniums should look like. The reasons for this divergence — poor seed genetics, clay soil, lack of a rest season, etc. — are of little consolation.
The thought of blooming hollyhocks may recall fond memories of earlier gardens. Fond memories are the visions of tall spires of glorious flowers, each an individual masterpiece of design. In our gardens though, hollyhock nostalgia often gives way to disease-infested, top-heavy plants, awkwardly positioned and seemingly out of place.
Foxgloves, the queen of many flower gardens, can be nearly effortless.
Plant foxglove transplants now, while green and flowerless, at the rear of a bed, where they'll make colorful backdrops for shorter plants. Group them in irregular clusters in the middle of other beds where they'll anchor lower-growing plantings. For traditional garden drama, plant an entire bed with a forest of foxgloves, ready to erupt in spring and summer blooms.
For spring bloom, fall is the time to plant foxgloves from seed. But most local gardeners don't have the patience to grow plants from seed anymore. No worries — in my experience, right now is the perfect time to set out small bedding plant-size foxglove plants. As spring unfolds, so too will your foxgloves, the flower spikes growing taller each day with the warming weather.
When selecting plants for your garden it is essential to choose the right hybrid. If the next couple of weeks find you too adding some foxglove to your garden, be sure they are the variety Foxy. Other varieties will take an extra year to bloom. Not Foxy, which blooms the first year. Often plants in nurseries and home centers are simply labeled "Foxglove." If you want flowers this spring, be sure the label says "Foxy." If it doesn't, keep looking.
Most foxgloves are biennials or short-lived perennials, producing lush foliage the first year and flowering in subsequent years. In the case of Foxy, hybridizing has led to a breakthrough, a variety that blooms the first year. If you've planted foxglove before, only to have a lush mound of green foliage, you didn't plant Foxy.
Foxy foxgloves are easy to grow. Set young, green plants from four-inch pots into soil amended with plenty of organic compost or planting mix. Along the coast of Orange County, foxgloves thrive in a variety of exposures, from full sun to moderately heavy shade. Be sure to keep them well watered. I have found that flooding the soil under your foxgloves, rather than overhead watering, will deliver water to the roots more effectively. Like an umbrella, the big, lush mound of leaves that foxglove produce often deflects needed water away from the roots of the plant.
Fertilize as you would for most other garden flowers, being careful not to allow errant nutrients to wash out of the garden and into gutters or storm drains. The flower spikes on Foxy are usually short enough to not require any staking, but if in an exposed or windy location, small bamboo stakes are usually adequate.
Cut the bloom stalks off foxgloves as soon as the last flowers on the spike are spent, but before they set seed. Foxglove planted now will reward you with flower stalks over a long period, each with two or three dozen flowers.
Foxglove sometimes gets a rap as poison to children and pets. Foxglove is poisonous, although recorded poisonings from this plant are very rare. Even though foxglove is toxic, fresh foxglove leaves have an acrid, bitter and disagreeable taste, making it unlikely to be consumed by people or pets. Nonetheless, young children should be taught never to put plant parts in their mouths.
Foxglove flowers come in a range of colors, but plants are never sold by specific color, instead always appearing in a blend of pastel colors, each flower painted uniquely. Shades of pink, rose and lavender always dominate the mix, following by cream, white and the occasional soft yellow.