Copywriting Guide

Flower Gardening Information Section


 

Flower Gardening Information Navigation

Main Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us

List of Copywriting Articles

Flower Gardening Information Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Flower Gardening Information products

Sitemap



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Copywriting
Email:
First Name:



Main Flower Gardening Information sponsors


 

Latest Flower Gardening Information Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Flower Gardening Information!



Newest Best Sellers

Copy Pen (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

Read more...

Work from Home as a Freelance Copywriter (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

Work from Home as a Freelance Copywriter
Work from Home as a Freelance Copywriter (Kindle Edition)
By Reno Charlton

Buy new: $2.99
196 used and new from $2.97
Customer Rating: 4.5

First tagged "copywriting" by Reviewer "philcyberia"
Customer tags: copywriting, writing guides, working from home, freelance writing, writing skills, writing

Read more...

How to Check and Correct Color Proofs (Hardcover) newly tagged "copywriting"

How to Check and Correct Color Proofs
How to Check and Correct Color Proofs (Hardcover)
By David Bann

Read more...

How To Get More Prospects, Customers, Sales and Profits For Your Business Using 7 Proven Marketing Secrets (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

How To Get More Prospects, Customers, Sales and Profits For Your Business Using 7 Proven Marketing Secrets
How To Get More Prospects, Customers, Sales and Profits For Your Business Using 7 Proven Marketing Secrets (Kindle Edition)
By Mark Hendricks

Read more...

Crank Out Copy That Sells: The Easy Outline for Everyone (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

Crank Out Copy That Sells: The Easy Outline for Everyone
Crank Out Copy That Sells: The Easy Outline for Everyone (Kindle Edition)
By George Lee

Buy new: $0.99

First tagged "copywriting" by Kaye T
Customer tags: copywriting(5), copywrite(5), advertising(5), robert bly(5), promotion(5), marketing(5), sales techniques(5), sales letters(5), business(5), sales copy(5), sales page(3), copywriters handbook(3)

Read more...

Marketing to Find Your IDEAL Client (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

Marketing to Find Your IDEAL Client
Marketing to Find Your IDEAL Client (Kindle Edition)
By Fred Gleeck

Read more...

Persuading People to Buy: Insights on Marketing Psychology That Pay Off for Your Company, Professional Practice or Nonprofit Organization (Audible Audio Edition) newly tagged "copywriting"

Persuading People to Buy: Insights on Marketing Psychology That Pay Off for Your Company, Professional Practice or Nonprofit Organization
Persuading People to Buy: Insights on Marketing Psychology That Pay Off for Your Company, Professional Practice or Nonprofit Organization (Audible Audio Edition)
By Marcia Yudkin

Read more...

 

Welcome to Copywriting Guide

 

Flower Gardening Information Article

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

Thoughts on Gardening - Annual Flowers

from:

One of the most pressing questions a gardener faces is whether to plant annuals or perennials. Perennials are plants which don’t die after one growing season, while annuals are plants that complete their life cycle in one year, going from seed to seed and then dying, over the span of one growing season. According to many experienced gardeners, gardening annual flowers is the way to go, especially if you’re a novice gardener. Annuals will come to flower almost immediately after you plant them and many will bloom for the whole growing season. What’s more, since annuals only last one growing season, next season you have the opportunity to create a whole new garden.

Annuals are very adaptable plants and though the majority requires good light, an average amount of water and relatively nutrient-rich soil, you will be able to find annuals to fit even the most extreme type of gardening. Annual flowers like ageratum, browallia, coleus, dianthus, fuschia, impatiens, lobelia, pansy, salvia, inca, and wishbone flower, do well in partly shady environments. A few annuals, like poppies, grow in only the poorest soils; annuals can grow in either wet or dry climates, and either wet or dry areas of your garden. Drought tolerant annuals include cleome, dusty miller, globe amaranth, petunias and zinnia, while annuals that do well in wet or boggy areas include browallia, fuchsia, nicotiania, and pansy. Annuals grow well in containers and cut annuals are wonderful to use in flower arrangements.

Some annuals are considered hardy annuals, being able to tolerate the first frosts without dying, blooming and setting seed as far as into the next year. Eventually, though, they will die. These can be planted in the fall or spring before the last frost. Calendula, cornflower, foxglove, larkspur, pansy, sweet alyssum, stocks, viola, and dianthus are hardy annuals; these types of flowers usually can not tolerate the heat.

Then there are half-hardy annuals, which can tolerate cold, damp weather but cannot handle frost or freezing temperatures. These can be planted after the last spring frost and include baby’s breath, bells of Ireland, blue sage, candytuft, celome, forget-me-nots, love-in-a-mist, snow-on-the-mountain, strawflower, and torenia. Midsummer sees many half-hardy annuals looking a little faded, but some may start to rebloom in late summer or fall before dying.

Finally, there are tender annuals, which are extremely sensitive to cold soil temperatures and are damaged by frost and freezing temperatures. Indeed, the seeds of tender annuals will rot and not germinate if soil temperatures are below 60 degrees. Two to three weeks from the last spring frost should pass before these are planted outdoors. Tender annuals include ageratum, balsam, begonia, celosia, coleus, globe amaranth, impatiens, marigold, morning glory, nasturtium, nicotiana, petunia, scarlet sage, verbena, vinca, and zinnia.

Furthermore, there are cool season annuals and warm season annuals.
Examples of the former would be pansies, geranium, petunia, and snapdragon which will start to wilt with the summer heat. Indeed, cool-season annuals like temperatures in the 70s and 80s during the day and they bloom best in spring and fall. Examples of warm-season annuals would be zinnias, blue daze, four-o’clocks, and pentas, which can’t grow until temperatures get warmer, into the 80s and 90s during the day and 60s and 70s at night.

So you’ve decided to try your hand with gardening annual flowers, you have a list of flowers, but you don’t know which ones you should start with. You could go with violas and pansies, which bloom literally for weeks and some can even handle a mild frost. Snapdragons may also be a good idea. They come in a stunning variety of colors and can get quite tall. Or, you could choose petunias, a favorite of many gardeners. There is a wide variety to choose from and they are very easy to care for. Petunias bloom best in cool temperatures. A good plant to start from seed is nasturtium, a flower that blooms throughout the summer and into the fall, advertising fall colors. Lastly, have a look at lobelia, which blooms in cool temperatures and can handle a partly shady location.

Once you’ve decided what flowers you wish to grow in your gardening annual flowers adventure, it’s time to get into the actual planting. In general, late afternoon is a good time for planting. You should water your soon-to-be-beautiful flowers and the soil in which they’re to be put as well before you do anything. Take the plants out of their pots very gently or you will disturb the roots, and if the roots are very compacted, you should loosen them gently with your hands before putting the plant in the ground.

Your work doesn’t end with putting the plant in the ground, however. Though most annuals are low maintenance plants, they still require care to allow them to grow healthy and strong. Obviously, your garden needs to be weeded and watered (each plant has its own individual requirements for water, so make sure you don’t over- or under-water). Furthermore, since the whole ‘purpose’ of an annual flower is to produce seed and propagate, if you remove the faded flowers before they set seed, the plant will produce more flowers to further its goal of producing seeds. This process of picking the faded flowers is called ‘deadheading’ and is a very important aspect in keeping your annual garden vibrant. Some gardeners also remove the growing tip of annual flowers, which encourages bushier, more compact and neater growth. Many annuals can be cut in mid to late summer to get them to flower again in the fall. Be responsible in gardening annual flowers and you won’t be disappointed!






 

Flower Gardening Information News

New Northwest garden books run from yard art to organic flowers - The Seattle Times


New Northwest garden books run from yard art to organic flowers
The Seattle Times
Gardening is nothing if not local, says Plant Life columnist Valerie Easton, so you can be sure that the featured plants, techniques and materials suit our climate. By Valerie Easton A gabion-style garden table is fashioned of heavy-duty-metal vintage ...
New crop of garden books yields good summer reads, thoughtful anytime giftsDaily Press

all 2 news articles »

Read more...


If the Chelsea Flower Show is too posh for you, try the Chelsea Fringe - The Independent


New York Times (blog)

If the Chelsea Flower Show is too posh for you, try the Chelsea Fringe
The Independent
... and tomorrow the Chelsea Flower Show will burst into life. But there is a third institution carrying the name of London's most upmarket district: the Chelsea Fringe, a three-week festival of nearly 80 gardening-themed events which began yesterday.
The Chelsea Flower Show Opens in LondonNew York Times (blog)
Chelsea's Perennial InspirationWall Street Journal
Chelsea Flower Show: Duchess of Cornwall gives 'guerrilla gardens' Royal seal ...Telegraph.co.uk
The Sun -Financial Times -The Guardian (blog)
all 261 news articles »

Read more...


Gardening: A peony for your thoughts - The Spokesman Review


Gardening: A peony for your thoughts
The Spokesman Review
Don't you just love the parade of flowers that we are treated to in the spring? First there were crocuses, daffodils and tulips. Then flowering crabapples, cherries, plums and pears lit up gardens around town with their delicate blossoms.

Read more...


Chelsea Flower Show 2012: BBC drops presenters from RHS event over 'conflict ... - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Chelsea Flower Show 2012: BBC drops presenters from RHS event over 'conflict ...
Telegraph.co.uk
BBC presenters who have designed gardens at this week's RHS Chelsea Flower Show have been banned from covering the event because of “conflict of interest” concerns. By Jasper Copping It is understood to be the first time the Corporation has introduced ...

Read more...


Master Gardeners: April showers bring flowers and pollinators - Marin Independent-Journal


Master Gardeners: April showers bring flowers and pollinators
Marin Independent-Journal
As the reproductive part of the plant, flowers are the means by which most of the plants in our gardens attract pollinators. Pollinators — typically wind, bees, hummingbirds, butterflies, moths, flies, bats, beetles, and, rarely, water — carry pollen ...

Read more...