Gardening Guide

Container Flower Gardening In Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Flower-Gardening
Email:
First Name:



Main Container Flower Gardening In sponsors


 

Latest Container Flower Gardening In Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Container Flower Gardening In!



 

Welcome to Gardening Guide

 

Container Flower Gardening In Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Gardening – Flowers/Plants

from:

If it’s your first time flower gardening, you should accept the fact that the process is going to be a learn-as-you-go kind of thing. Consider starting with an “experimental plot”, roughly about twenty to thirty square feet, which will accommodate about 20 to 30 gardening flowers/plants (choose mainly annuals and a few perennials). To start your first garden, you’re going to have to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty, literally. Keep in mind that starting your garden will be a lot more work than maintaining it. Indeed, you’re going to have to spend lots of time tilling new ground and getting rid of long-established weeds to prepare your little bed of beauty.

Many experts agree that annuals (gardening flowers/plants that live for only one growing season) are good for the beginner gardener because they don’t require lots of work and they provide you with a virtually instantaneous burst of color. Indeed, they begin flowering soon after planting and will most likely keep their bloom until fall. Another benefit of annuals is that if you don’t like the color arrangement you’ve chosen, by next growing season, it’s gone and you can choose a whole new palette to work with.

You can either start your garden with seeds or gardening flowers/plants that have already begun to grow. There are a variety of suggestions among the gardening gurus as to the best way to start a garden and what the better option is for beginning gardeners.

Seeds are often a bit more difficult to deal with and require a lot more care and preparation to get growing. You must be careful with getting gardening flowers/plants that are already growing, though. For one thing, seeds are less expensive, so if something goes wrong, you lose less money. For another, if the growing plants were not given care, then they could be suffering from a wide variety of diseases, due to malnutrition or some kind of infection or infestation. If you are able to find a nursery where the gardening flowers/plants look healthy and you invest the time into looking carefully at each plant before you take it home, then you might be better off with a seedling. Don’t get plants that are too mature, as it will be hard to transplant them and get their roots to take in your garden.

Well, at least once you’ve done all that research to start your flower garden, you can finally sit back and relax, right? Wrong. Having a flower garden does not mean that the work stops once you’ve prepared your location and planted the flowers. You’ll need to maintain the garden and the flowers, by pruning, dividing cultivars, bringing plants indoors for protection, and setting them back outside. Like all hobbies, to do it right, it requires dedication.




Other Container Flower Gardening In related Articles

112 Wild Flower Gardening
111 Flower Gardening Guide
119 Encyclopedia Of Gardening Flower Plant
114 Flower Gardening In Containers
101 Flower Gardening

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Container Flower Gardening In Specific links

Container Flower Gardening In News

David Robson: Twice the flower power with annuals - MetroWest Daily News


David Robson: Twice the flower power with annuals
MetroWest Daily News
That's what keeps gardening exciting. Reblooming plants can get gardeners' hands sweating and itching to plant, just like a juicy steak can set off salivary glands. By their nature, most annual flowers are rebloomers. A little pinching of the old ...

and more »

Read more...


Gardening: The Basics of Herb Planting - Patch.com


Gardening: The Basics of Herb Planting
Patch.com
Herb gardening can be a resourceful tool for the kitchen as well as a lovely enhancement to any vegetable or flowering garden. A surprising fact about herbs is that they can be planted as perennials or annuals. With that in mind, don't plant perennial ...

and more »

Read more...


Container Gardening Success: Lettuce - ChicagoNow (blog)


Container Gardening Success: Lettuce
ChicagoNow (blog)
Late one night, the hubs and I sat in our den, planting seed starters. We had just moved into this home a few weeks before, and the den was going to be my "writing room." We then agreed to dedicate a corner of it to gardening supplies.

Read more...


Container Gardening Tips - Plainview Daily Herald


Container Gardening Tips
Plainview Daily Herald
Ever thought of doing a garden with containers? This is becoming more popular with limited space. Did you know you can grow a tomato from an old potato sack or a 5-gallon bucket or plant lettuce in window flower boxes? You even can plant a vined cherry ...

and more »

Read more...


Short on Space? Try Container Gardening - KUNC


Short on Space? Try Container Gardening
KUNC
By Tom Throgmorton Container gardening is an easy and convenient way to have flowers and vegetables in small spaces. KUNC gardener Tom Throgmorton has tips and advice on starting your own container garden. Flowers in containers liven up a deck or porch ...

Read more...