Tips and Ideas for Choosing Garden Flower
You will want flowers for cutting and flowers for contributing 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 centre 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 color. 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.
Foundation Planting
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 color 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.
For more information on Choosing Garden Flowers, or other house plant information visit the
related links below.