13,520 Garden Web Discussions | Perennials

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vera_eastern_wa(5a-5b)

You are so welcome Bonnie :)

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 9:36AM
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sara82lee(8a - SE Va)

How did your other blanketflower die?

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 11:01PM
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david883(5/6)

I asked the same question last year.... And Ken gave me a very similar response then, too. I followed what he said and was not disappointed at all!

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 8:51PM
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cherry67(6)

Well I cut them all back to about 6-8" so now just so watch and wait. We just had a ton of rain over the earlier part of this week so my beds are pretty wet, but no standing water in them at least.
TexasRanger thanks for the sand suggestion, but I think I'll wait and see how it all goes. I've heard conflicting stuff about sand and clay soil so for now I'm just making sure we till some composted manure in any new beds although it probably wouldn't hurt to use it as a yearly addition to the top of the beds too. Hopefully they'll be as big as yours someday.
Thanks again for all of your advice, everyone!

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 2:28PM
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brit5467(7b/8a Coastal VA)

Floral....re: posting pics....I sent her the way I was taught few years back, using the direct link code and adding in an "img src" code. But if there's an easier way, please share :)

bonnie

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 7:05AM
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floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK

Hi Bonnie. I don't know about 'img src' code. I only know you can copy the html code which is beside the pic on Photobucket and paste direct into your post. Or if it's only one picture use the tab called 'choose file' on Post a Follow -Up.

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 12:36PM
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aachenelf z5 Mpls

It really shouldn't matter if these are purchased bare root or potted. I also think it would be difficult to find these mail order as bare root plants. I've never seen them this way.

I suspect there's another reason your potted ones didn't survive. Possibly the time of the year you purchased and planted them, were they dried out in their pots for any length of time, were they watered adequately when you planted them, etc. etc.

Kevin

    Bookmark     May 1, 2014 at 9:58AM
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aachenelf z5 Mpls

Plant them now.

K

    Bookmark     April 21, 2014 at 10:13PM
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edlincoln(6A)

Do NOT wait until Fall. It's tricky to store bulbs that long without killing them, particularly lily.

The Daffodils may have a papery covering. The lilies will be scaly. The two of them can probably cohabit fine. (The daffodil blooms early and goes to sleep). The monkey grass is the thing you have to be careful to get rid of if you want the lilies to survive.

    Bookmark     April 30, 2014 at 10:54PM
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Nevermore44 - 6a

though it is only marginally perennial in my area (zone 6), I have been using Verbena canadensis as an annual here. They are typically sold at a nominal price....they are perfect for the cascading wall effect.. they bloom heavily but aren't a single blanket of blooms... a single plant can spread nicely within a single year.. blooming continually until the fall... and they don't need to be tended at all.

They will root down where the stems touch the soil, but are very easily to pull up after the fall or in the spring. And they come in a few color varieties.

    Bookmark     April 30, 2014 at 10:23AM
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ptwonline

lacyvail,

A bit late! Last year I planted a couple of Rozannes, which I believe are Geranium Sanguineum. I thought they spread by rhizomes and the seeds were sterile? I didn't expect them to shoot seeds all over. Guess I will have to keep my eyes open for that.

My other geraniums are Biokovo, and I love the fragrance of the leaves!

    Bookmark     April 30, 2014 at 2:54PM
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rusty_blackhaw(6a)

An unusually cold winter + Ruellia could well mean no plants this year in zone 6.

If whatever species/hybrid it is is marginal in z. 6, it still might be worth trying again.

I never found Ruellia hybrids to be especially thuggy in the Gulf Coast region, but maybe that was because I was battling other thugs (like Passiflora "Incense", which was capable of submarining under sidewalks to pop up in new places).

    Bookmark     April 30, 2014 at 8:34AM
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gyr_falcon(Sunset 23 USDA 9)

I love this plant, but am about to give up on it because it has to be confined to a container due to a lack of garden space and its running tendencies. If it didn't get so huge, I'd just let it run. Container growing is fine for year one, then it gets so pot bound that it requires watering every day, even though the base sits in a saucer of water. The real difficulty is that splitting and repotting mean all of the old soil and roots need to be disposed of in the trash. :( I hate the waste. But I can understand your wanting to have this plant growing in your garden, njdevil. There is something special about those flowers.

    Bookmark     April 30, 2014 at 1:07PM
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mxk3(Zone 6 SE MI)

No. Spring fever hasn't hit me yet, although I did buy seeds; my annual, vegetable, and herb seedlings are coming along quite nicely. I've also been busy fixing up the inside of the house - definitely in the buying mood for the house :0) Plus, I'm so overwhelmed with cr@p to do in the yard (since I left a big mess in the fall), I have all that to deal with - part of me is looking forward to getting to work out there while another part of me is dreading it. I plan on starting to tackle the clean-up this weekend.

I'm sure when the weather finally warms up and it's time to hit the nurseries for the yearly annual-buying binge, I'll be all gung-ho :0p

    Bookmark     April 29, 2014 at 7:48PM
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prairiemoon2 z6 MA

Over the winter, I didn't get to look over catalogs or update my journal or think a lot about what I needed to do this year. And so I've been playing catch up for the past month.

Last Fall, I decided to redo a few areas and put in an order for roses. The nursery sells out quickly so I had to put the order in early. I'm still trying to find disease resistant roses and keep trying a few. And that was the extent of my ordering until March when I had to order vegetable seeds.

When you order roses you have to choose a shipping date and you're supposed to get the barefoot roses in as early as possible, so I chose the last week in March for a shipping date. They came the day we had a week of freezing temperatures and I still had snow on the ground. [g] So I had to keep them in the refrigerator for 10 days before I could plant them. But they are doing great and I'm amazed. I thought for sure they were not going to make it. So that's exciting.

I did go shopping last weekend in that dreary cold rain we had, and had the nurseries all to ourselves. Brought home a few shrubs and native plants. One of the fruiting Sambucus which I am also excited about and have been trying to find one for a couple of years. And tomato plants that I didn't get started in time, that are now sitting under lights until the weather warms up. What about July maybe? :-)

Seriously, this weather has to change soon, right? Every week, I say to myself, this is the last week and the week after that it's finally going to warm up. As soon as we get a sunny week with temperatures in the 70s, we'll all be a lot more excited and motivated!

    Bookmark     April 29, 2014 at 8:40PM
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paul_(z5 MI)

Hmm, don't recall what variety of globe allium I plant years ago up at my folks' place, but have never had that issue. The allium foliage always dies off long before it causes an issue.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 5:57PM
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threedogsmom

Anemone Robustissima has spread all throughout my perennial bed and gravel paths. The first year it looked so grand, clear pink flowers swaying in the breeze. Now I am constantly trying to pull it out, but it conveniently breaks off at the root and re-grows. I have a few of the others people have mentioned but they have not gone crazy yet. YET. I am trying to get crocosmia to put on a show, but the place it is in gets dry and hot, and I don't baby it. The other one I have is Major Wheeler Honeysuckle and some other red/orange honeysuckle that was popular last year - the name escapes me now. Both were vigorous growers but I just kept pruning them to the space I have allotted for them. They are playing nicely (for now) with a purple clematis and a deep pink John Cabot rose, all trained on the fence that is a backdrop to a driveway bed/hellstrip. The things I do for those cute hummingbirds!!

    Bookmark     April 29, 2014 at 1:02PM
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grandmamaloy(7)

I haven't grown it here in OK, but I DID grow it when I lived in CO. Yes, it will appreciate good drainage, and due to the humidity in MN, I would opt for a very sunny site as well. As far as temperature, they are hardy to quite low temps and the foothills of the Rockies are not necessarily snowy but can be extremely windy and drying. However, they may not survive ice well, which the base of the Rockies does not usually get. Once it is well established though, it should be quite hardy in your area. You might want to make sure to cover it in the worst winter weather the first year or two.

Here is a link that might be useful: Penstemon/Beard Tongue

    Bookmark     April 23, 2014 at 10:01AM
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garystpaul(4)

Thank you, grandmamaloy. Good to hear.

    Bookmark     April 29, 2014 at 9:42AM
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gailwrite(6KY)

I have clusters ever 3 inches - this is an invasion.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 9:07PM
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Nevermore44 - 6a

Onion soup. Lots and lots of onion soup.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 9:25PM
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christinmk z5b eastern WA

-SB, LOL! I can almost see the Asexual Reproduction Prevention Unit breaking down my little gate and scouring my yard for the offending extra plants, looking thru my tag box, doing dna testing....
;-D
CMK

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 8:26PM
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gardenweed_z6a

-SB, LOL! I can almost see the Asexual Reproduction Prevention Unit breaking down my little gate and scouring my yard for the offending extra plants, looking thru my tag box, doing dna testing....

Um, your tax dollars at work? Soylent Green anyone?

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 8:44PM
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funnthsun z7A - Southern VA

I have Black Scallop and there's nothing blue about the bloom, it is definitely a dark lavender in color. I have it, among other places, beside a Blackout Heuchera. Mine is just starting to bloom. Excuse the quickly-snapped pic, I just stepped out at dusk to grab one for you.

I'm preeeettty sure Bronze Beauty is also a lavender purple, but I don't have it personally, so I'll let someone else that does clarify that. Good luck to you!

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 7:44PM
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linnea56(z5 IL)

Thank you so much!
It is a mystery to me why vendors want to call a flower blue when it isn't.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 8:02PM
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terrene(5b MA)

Very colorful and pretty!

I wonder what they do with the beds when the tulips have gone by??

    Bookmark     April 27, 2014 at 8:30PM
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sandyslopes z5 n. UT

They dig up all the tulips and sell them at the end of May. I've never bought any, but some people I talked to said they were buying more because they did grow for them in the past.

I know at least one of the big beds gets planted with herbs and annuals, but I also wonder what they do with all the other areas. I might find out if I go back later in summer when it's time for the roses, but it's always so hot by then that it's not as much fun.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 8:01PM
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gyr_falcon(Sunset 23 USDA 9)

If the plant is now growing under shadier conditions than where it was grown prior to your purchase, the newer leaves can become larger and paler to compensate for the lower light level. They also appear in the photo to have become softer in texture. That is a normal response for the changed conditions and/or just being younger leaves.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 12:32PM
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msrose(TX8)

It's planted on the west side of my house so it gets quite a bit of shade, but is then hit by the hot Texas afternoons. I planted it in a small area leading up to my front door. I liked it because it was shorter than most of the liriope plants, so I'm disappointed the leaves are longer and bigger now.

    Bookmark     April 28, 2014 at 7:55PM
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