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Flower gardening and you

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Flower gardening has long been a rewarding and inexpensive hobby for both new and experienced enthusiasts. Selecting and planting flower seeds, bulbs or flowering plants is highly enjoyable, relaxing, and a physical outdoor activity people of all ages can enjoy alone or share with others. Joy and wonder are to be had by simply pushing several flower seeds into the ground and adding tap water. Seasoned and first time gardeners alike delight in the sweet fragrances and colors that blossom before their very eyes and noses.

Gathering information and seeds for successful flower gardening is simple and quick with the Internet. Mail order and Online seed catalogs offer an amazing variety of seeds and bulbs for every type of flower gardening. Although it can be exciting and somewhat overwhelming to discover the number of flower seeds one has to choose from, knowing your personal preferences for color and space available will help in making the best choices. Most seed catalogs and flower gardening sites offer beautifully coordinated combinations of seed blends that include flowers with different heights that aesthetically work well together. These pre-arranged flower assortments help make selection uncomplicated and inexpensive.

Flowers are classified based on the amount of time it takes to complete their life cycle; there are three divisions: annuals, biennials and perennials. Annuals are a great choice for parents and kids as a family endeavor as well as beginning gardeners. Flower seeds of the annual type are relatively large, quite easy to handle, and they are fast growing. Sunflowers, African Daisies and Dahlias are a few highly popular choices for annual flower gardening as they germinate quickly and will be flowering within weeks after the initial planting.

The life cycle of biennial garden flowers begins during autumn when they develop leaves, continues through the winter season and ends in the spring when they bloom, produce seeds and then die. Foxglove, Canterbury bells and hollyhock are popular biennials for flower gardening.

One advantage of perennials is there no need to plant them every year. After the second year, perennial garden flowers blossom yearly. Although some perennials only bloom for several weeks each year, with a well thought-out flower gardening plan, some perennials can be found in bloom most of the season in any garden. Shasta daisy, Black-Eyed Susan and Columbine are popular perennials for flower gardening in many different climates.

Flower gardening is truly a beautiful and pleasant pastime the young and young at heart can share. Indeed, with flower gardening, the bounty of nature received can be brought indoors to brighten your home or given to others to share nature's grace.


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Gardening Organic Rose News

Ready for spring veggie gardening? - Houston Chronicle

-- Choose a garden site that is fairly visible. Remember, out of sight, out of mind. You will want to check the garden frequently for pests. -- Sun is important. Vegetables are most productive if they receive at least a half day of sunlight. Morning ...

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Victory gardens sprout up again - Los Angeles Times

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January Ask the Master Gardeners - Wilson County News

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January an excellent time to tend to, create new beds - Cleburne Times-Review

I know we complain about the heat in the summer, but as gardeners living in North Texas we don’t really have much to complain about in the winter. In other areas of the country gardening comes to a complete halt, but we are only interrupted a day ...

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Follow these gardening tips and 2009 will be the 'Year of the Garden.' - Austin American-Statesman

Plant asparagus and artichoke crowns, onion transplants, broccoli, cabbage, chard, cauliflower, lettuce, arugula, beets, collards, kale, leeks, kohlrabi, carrots, turnips and cool-season peas. Sow seeds of annual flowers and vegetables indoors for ...

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