How to Start A Garden
Before you begin growing a garden, you’ll need to learn more about the growing zone you live in. A good place to start is the National Gardening Association’s website (www.garden.org/zipzone), which will let you know which USDA hardiness zone you live in, as well as what plants are best suited for your particular climate. In the bottom left-hand corner, you’ll see an area for “Local Guides,” where you can choose your state and your city to learn more about edible food and flowers you can grow, about caring for your garden and cooking from your garden. These gardening tips can help you begin thinking about what types of flowers you’d like to grow.
Those with little gardening experience will often opt to transplant annuals that have already been grown at a nursery. This is a quick-fix garden for the front yard if you’re hurrying to catch up with the neighbors. You may also try container gardening from seed as an experiment. Once the containers fill with blooms, you can bring them out to the front yard. Some people garden rather extensively with containers and place them all next to one another, so you see a full garden, rather than the individual pots. Petunias, marigolds, begonias, geraniums, impatiens, pansies, petunias and salvia are popular varieties. A good place to start is at www.backyardgardener.com/annual/index.html, where you can learn which annuals will endure in cold weather, endure in heat, grow in poor soil, have a short bloom season, can be sown in the fall and are best for your soil type.
Some people enjoy growing a garden that will magically come back each year, without replanting. This is called a perennial garden. You can gather more information and perennial flower gardening tips at www.backyardgardener.com/pren/index.html. You’ll learn about perennials for backgrounds, for edging, for hardy environments, for long blooming seasons, for old-fashioned gardens and for semi-shade gardens. Some popular perennials include peonies, bleeding hearts, columbine, daffodils, crocuses, irises, asters, chrysanthemums, daisies, violets and black eyed Susan. You’ll need to pay special attention to color, height and bloom period are all equally important when dealing with perennials.
Growing a garden successfully usually takes a little bit of trial and error. Over the years, you’ll learn where to fill in the bald spots, which plants can’t quite survive in your area and which plants really flourish. During the year, you’ll need to water your new plants daily (unless it rains) and occasionally add more mulch or top soil nutrients. Be sure to remain vigilant about weeds and pests that invade your garden. Also keep an eye out for plants that seem to be choking themselves: a trim at this point is always the best idea. At the end of the season, conventional gardening advice says that you must cover any perennials with 4-5 inches of mulch to keep the roots protected during the frigid winter.
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