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Planning a Flower Garden

Filed under: Selecting Roses    

When planning a flower garden, you might find it difficult to choose which flowers to plant. Although there’s no such thing as a bad choice of flowers, there are some choices that can take your garden from okay to simply magnificent. Here are some tips to consider when you’re trying to choose which beautiful blooms you want for your garden.

How Much Light Do You Have?

If your garden is located in an area that gets direct sunlight for part of the time, and shade for the rest of the time, your flower choices are almost infinite. The majority of flowers in the world are best adapted to these half-and-half lighting conditions.


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A very sunny area limits your choices a little - consider planting flowers that not only enjoy sunlight, but can stand up to direct heat. A few good strong sunlight flowers are sunflowers (of course) and daylilies.

If you have an area that is more on the shady side, you can go for lower-light flowers such as irises, tiger lilies, or honeysuckle. These plants are more tolerant of the cooler temperature in the shade, and their photosynthesis process is adapted to smaller amounts of sunlight.

Your Soil

If you’re planting in a rocky area, you may have some trouble getting many plants to take root. The ideal dirt for flowers, of course, is black, fine dirt without much rubble. If you live in an area where the ground has a sand consistency, look into planting local flowers- those will be the ones most adapted to growing in sand, such as violets.

Making Your Choices

This is the fun part - being creative.

Once you get an idea of what types of flowers you’re able to grow, it’s time to think about what types you’d like to grow. Try drawing out your garden on a sheet of paper, based on the various heights the plants are expected to reach. Try framing sunflowers with ground covering plants that will flourish in the shade of the taller plants around them. Pay attention to the colors of the blossoms and arrange them in a pleasing manner.

Use your imagination here- feel free to plan a garden with a strict outline, featuring only blue and yellow flowers; or let your brain and your garden run wild, with bursts of random color everywhere. When planning where to put your roses, you can choose to locate them on their own in a feature section, or include them amongst your other flowers. It’s up to you.

Give It Some Time To Mature

Keep in mind that the first year of a flower garden is only the beginning. If you truly want to enjoy your garden to the utmost, try to plant perennials that will return next season. That will give the plants a year to mature and gain strength. Also, make sure to spend a little time pruning your roses and other plants that benefit from pruning, and with a little luck, you’ll be surprised each year with a flourishing flower garden that gets stronger and brighter as time goes by.
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Rosier Francois Arago
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