Showing posts with label blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Landscape Boom For Independence Day!



Showcasing red, white, and blue vivid flowers in your landscape is a great way to accent your patriotism and a wonderful way to brighten up your neighborhood!  Finding our national colors with just the right seasonal bloom is very easy if you know what to look for.  You can display your flowers in mass planting beds, and around lighting, flagpoles and mailboxes.  For smaller apartments, and Fourth of July parties, you can decorate by your front door, on the patio, and on balconies with container gardens, and window boxes.

Setting up your mass bedding plants with patriotic colors, you will want to remember different heights and width.  Having a tiered effect of red, white and blue is extremely effective if your house is neutral or you have an evergreen hedge as a backdrop.  Coordinate your color palette by looking at your plants before you plant them.  Placing them in the desired location and standing in the road or in your neighbor’s yard to judge the potential impact is a good idea; before you do all the grunt work of installing them and then not getting the look you were ultimately desiring.
Colorful and patriotic clay, plastic, and ceramic, containers with decorative accoutrements such as ribbons, gold stars or flags, are an easy way to get into the independent spirit if it’s temporary, or if you only have a small area or location to work with.  Use a good potting soil and make sure if you are using window boxes that you allow for good drainage away from house walls.
           
Here are my flag-waving suggestions for red, white, and blue annuals and perennials with their height designations for placement in your garden bed or container.  As always — please check online, with local nursery or extension office for sun and moisture requirements before purchasing and combine plants only if they have similar needs.
Tall (t – use in back), medium (m – use in middle), and low (l- use as groundcover) or h (hanging).
Red Flowers
  • Begonia, wax (l, m)
  • Begonia, tuberous(l, m)
  • Cardinal flowers (t)
  • Celosia  (m)
  • Dianthus (m) 
  • Gerbera daisies  (l)
  • Geranium (l, m)
  • Gomphrena (m)
  • Impatiens (l)
  • Kalanchoe (l)
  • Lantana (m, h)
  • Lobelia (m)
  • Pentas (m, t)
  • Pentstemon (m,t)
  • Phlox (l)
  • Porterweed (t) 
  • Salvia (m, t)
  • Vinca (m)
  • Verbena (l,m, h)
  • Roses (see suggestions below)
  • Zinnias (l,m)  
White Flowers 
  • Begonia, tuberous (l, m)
  • Begonia, wax (l, m)
  • Catwhiskers (t)
  • Chrysanthemums (l, m)
  • Cosmos (l, m)
  • Dianthus (l)
  • Geraniums (l, m)
  • Impatiens (l)
  • Lantana (l, h)
  • Lisianthus, (m, t)
  • Marigolds, French (l, m) 
  • Moonflowers (vine)
  • Morning glories (vine)
  • Nemesia (l)
  • Nicotiana (m, t)
  • Osteospernum (m) 
  • Pentas (m,t)
  • Phlox (l)
  • Philippine violets (t)
  • Roses (see suggestions below)
  • Zinnias (l, m)   
Blue Flowers:
  • Agapanthus (t)
  • Ageratum (l)
  • Ajuga (l - shade)
  • Asters (m)
  • Blue Daze (l, h) 
  • Blue flax (l, m)
  • Centaura (m)
  • Exacum (l)
  • Lisianthus (m, t)
  • Morning glories (vine) 
  • Nemesia (l,)
  • Salvia, blue (m, t)
  • Scabiosa  (m)
  • Stokes Asters (m)
  • Torenia (l)
  • Porterweed (t)
  • Philipine Violets (t)
  • Plumbago  (t)
  • Russian Sage (t)
  • Verbena (l, h)
  • Veronica Speedwell (m)
Additional Summer Flowers for northern zones 4 – 7     
  • Alyssum (l)
  • Chrysanthemums (l, m)
  • Delphiniums (t)
  • Forget-me-nots (m) 
  • Hollyhocks (t)
  • Nicotiana (t)
  • Pansies (l)
  • Petunias (l, h)
  • Poppy (m, t)
  • Snapdragons (l, m, t)
  • Statice (m, t)
  • Stock (m, t)
Patriotic Roses: 

 Over 35 cultivars named America or have American in their name, these are my favorites:
  • America, large-flowered climber, orange-pink, fragrant
  • American Beauty: climber, strong fragrance, deep pink, the national flower symbol of United States
  • America, Climber, coral pink, strong fragrance
  • Fourth of July, 1999 All American selection, climber, red flowers striped with white, apple-fragrance
  • Memorial Day, 2004 All American selection, hybrid tea, dark pink, strong damask fragrance
  • Americana, hybrid, strong fragrance, medium red
  • Miss All-American Beauty, hybrid, pink, fragrant
  • Mr. Lincoln, deep red, hybrid tea, long-stemmed rose, fragrant
  • John F. Kennedy, white, hybrid tea, strong fragrance
  • Veteran’s Honor, hybrid tea, dark red, raspberry fragrance
  • American Pride, hybrid tea, large-flowered, dark red, strong fragrance
  • Patriot, large flowered hybrid, dark red, mildly fragrant
  • Peace, pink-yellow, hybrid tea, mild fragrance
  • United States, pernetiana, yellow, rare

Have a great Fourth of July!

Reprinted from permission from Suite 101, Gardening with Soul,  July 2004

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

Monday, October 17, 2011

Am I Blue?


With anticipated one to three inches of rain this week, I'm taking the opportunity to plant winter and spring blooming flower seeds. This year I'm going to add one of my favorite colors to my landscape.  I planted delphiniums in the back of my border garden.  Delphiniums take full sun, moderate moisture, and grow to three feet tall. The seeds will take two weeks to emerge and will bloom January through March.

Other cool season blue annuals that will thrive in Florida are lobelias, pansies, and veronica.  Blue flowering perennials and ornamental shrubs to add to your landscape include agapanthus, hydrangea, salvias, and plumbago.








Want more winter annuals to plant in your garden? Check out  Annuals Flowers for  Florida.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Blue Butterflies "In Your Backyard"

On the radio show, last week I had a great call from JJJ's Ornamental Nursery, a local nursery about a flower that looked like a butterfly. A blue butterfly that attracts butterflies! Decide for yourself.

I immediately thought of a large bush with blue flowers called Clerodendrum ugandense. They are large shrubs that do well in full sunlight or partial sunlight with rich soils. Also called Oxford bushes, this Kenyan native plant is zoned for 10-11, but will recover from any freezing in zones 8-9. Pruning the bush is recommended as it blooms on new growth.

You can find the beautiful Butterfly bushes at:

Speaking of blue butterflies, the Miami Blue butterfly is still on Florida's endangered species list. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission is now requesting information on the biological status of 61 species for rulings in November. Please check out the species listed and if you have any information that you feel is beneficial, make your voice known!

The FWC is specifically requesting information on:
  • population size and trends;
  • distribution and range;
  • threats to the species;
  • published population viability models; and
  • specific aspects of the species' life history that may influence the range-wide and Florida-specific status of the species.

Information and data should be sent to:

Mail:
Biological Status Reviews
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
620 South Meridian Street
Mail Station 2A
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600

E-mail:
Imperiled@MyFWC.com

Responses will be accepted until 5 p.m., Nov. 1, 2010.