GREAT information today - timely for summer. Thanks for the transplant information on Althea! I trimmed out the lower branches and it looks fantastic in my little kitchen garden for now since I have full sun all summer and it sort of protects the others from our extreme heat.
Allen I loved working in the flower gardens with the woman but I had to work with the guys to there was alot of jelousy of me because I worked with the woman in the gardens
You all probably dont give a shit but does someone know of a way to get back into an instagram account?? I was dumb forgot the login password. I would love any help you can give me!
@Jadiel Fox i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im in the hacking process atm. Seems to take a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
Loved the Hot Days gardening tips. I too love Russian Sage. Honey Bees are getting rarer and rarer here. Thank you for beeing (intentional misspell) their advocate. They need one. I wish more people would realize the poisons are broad spectrum and kill more than the intended target. Another viewer said they would like the tours to be longer. I agree!! The tours are wonderful. Longer would be great! And don't worry about repeating. Viewing garden beauty and getting good gardening tips more than once is a joy, not a fault. I would love to see the Rose Garden repeatedly as the different varieties come into bloom (with subtitles identifying who is in flower). And I would love to see a Hummingbird plant special tour/blog.
I so enjoy these "Master Classes" with the Master! Thank you for continuing to provide details and information to those f us who are always interested in learning more! Appreciating you in Kansas!🌻🌻🌻
Thank you so much for all this great information. My backyard is like a dessert so hot but now! I’m going to be working on it to make it a super happy and beautiful place for all. And yes please talk all you want on plants I could listen for hours. ❤️
Zinnias have always brought me the most compliments in my gardens. They are very tolerant of heat and very intolerant of overwatering. My kind of compliment plant.
Thanks for the tips and list of flowers. Mostly interested in perennials. Certain annuals I always put out but want more flowers that return year after year. Well done video.
I haven't seen your videos for a while I just ran across them today and with all this concern about this covid-19 virus this gave me a lot of positive feelings you always have a insightful and knowledgeable video of your perennials and annuals you give me hope about our future that we should go out and enjoy life and plant life before all this disruption they came into our lives I wish you a happy summer God bless you
Hi! My husband and I have been married a year and have just recently moved into a house and started our first garden together. We're loving it! We've discovered that we have different tastes in plants; he likes really exotic, tropical looking plants whereas I go for more native, naturalistic-looking plantings for our 7b/8a zone in the foothills of SC. What are some plants that marry the two styles, or plant combinations that can blend our tastes for a happy cohesive garden? Thanks!
I grow hardy banana (musa basjoo) and canna along with more traditional flowers in my zone 7a garden in NJ. I put the banana and canna in the back, since they’re tall, and the shorter flowers in front. It gives you a great tropical look.
I agree, Altheas are fantastic plants-beautiful foliage and flowers. Anyone who dismisses them as “old-fashioned” is not a true garden lover. The new trailing zinnias are great as a low maintenance border or in pots in a hot, sunny location.
Love Rose of Sharon or Althea, is beautiful. Drought resistant and a staple for Texas gardens. Also Crepe Myrtle . Flowers and offers dapple shade for any ground plants, Good information.
I'm in south central OK, my lantana is not doing well this year. I can't determine what is different from previous years. However, vincas are thriving. They love the heat and sunshine. I've always ignored them in the past thinking they were too plain and going for the petunias, but I've already yanked out all sad petunias while vincas are putting on quite the show. Thanks for the videos full of wonderful info!! And, your tours are just so much fun!
Thank you for your advice. It's great that you tell us the upkeep and how to keep some of these re-blooming. I wish you'd mention whether these are invasive? I understand that is often a characteristic of plants that are drought tolerant and deer resistant.I love the idea of perennials, but I want them to stay where I plant them and not crowd out others. Thanks
We are growing the plants that are mentioned. Our problem is the terrible clay dirt. Hoping this year they look better... thanks so much for your video.
Robyn zone 7 - Thanks for the info there are a few plants that I've seen in gardens but now that you've given me some info on them - Im now interested in planting them in my garden. But like you stated in the video regarding the Rose of Sharon 😩 as soon as the picture came on the screen my whole body flinched. I don't care for them because of how my neighbors plant always seeds always drop on my side. I'm constantly have to pull up those little seedlings from my yard. Are there any Rose of Sharon that don't drop seeds?
I live at 7000 feet in the Southern California mountains, my son lives nearby at 6,665 feet. I can't grow many of the same plants he does. In fact, if you go down the "hill" to 6,500 feet, you will find beautiful flower and vegetable gardens growing in the summer months. My question is: Are plants affected by atmosphere and pressure? I can tell you that 75 degrees here feels like 95 degrees down in the valley because of the thinner air.
I observed that the butterfly species in many of your pictures is called a pipeline swallowtail. If you want these in your yard, and I do, they have a beautiful metallic blue wing like no other butterfly in North America, you need to plant a vine called a pipe line. It is a native American plant. Rather slow grower but it does tend to go for walks underground so put it where you can let it romp.
Hello Mr. Smith I absolutely love your farm and your you tube channel. I need some advise I’m new to gardening . I have a wet corner from the ac drain pipe what can I plant on a wet summer spot n dry in winter? I’m in Charlotte NC zone 7b - 8a thank you for your help. Mayra
Thanks for your inspiration of flowers. We have a beach house at the outer Banks NC & we have our back year is closed in with white fence. Would love to plant perennials but its sandy hot soil. Any suggestions? Plus very salty air..
I live in the Carolinas and went on vacation in june for a week. The temperature rose to 90 degrees. The sun patients in my flower boxes never died . I use the wire flower boxes with the coconut fiber. The baskets go dry quickly even when I line them with plastic. This is the first year I have not had to replant my flower boxes. Love my sun patients.
I remember a wonderful smelling flower that I could grow in Louisiana in winter. It was called stock. Nurseries no longer carry this spicy treat--at least, wherever I tried, even online. Do you know why it is no longer available even in seed form?
You can get stock seeds online, and actually, one of my local nurseries has some pots they've grown out. (Note to self: go buy some tomorrow!) I think it's coming back into awareness, like a lot of those good old lovely plants we grew up with!
Great info on sun loving flowers. I just bought a “Miss Molly” butterfly bush thanks to you. I was wondering how far do I need to cut it back? And also when? Not sure if this type blooms on old or new wood. Thanks for the great tips you share.
What deterrent could keep the fine thick tree roots from choking the garden? They show up under the surface everywhere we feed and water, and when we dig even after a hard rain the soil is very dry . They even come up through weed block into raised garden and take over in one season.
Red bird of paradise aka pride of Barbados is amazing in full sun under the hottest conditions in the desert ... and like that Russian sage, if you give it a ‘top trim’ (not necessarily in half) maybe about 8” to 12” (its a good five to six feet high plant) the blooms will revigorate even more so , but letting them go all summer, they are still wonderful bloomers regardless... in nov or December it’s good to cut them way back and by March you will have vigorous re growth with a large beautiful bloomer until October ... might be a cool plant to try in other areas outside the tropics and the desert
I live in the DFW area and I would like to know what grows well in the northern side. It gets quite warm here even in the shade. I recently bought an astilbe and I hope it does well in this area.
OMG!!! I LOVE IT I KNOW SUNFLOWER MAKES A GARDEN LOOKS SO BEAUTIFUL JUST THE YELLOW BRINGS OUT BRIGHTNESS WOW THAT'S HOW YOU SAY IT YAROO LOL MAYBE IM SAYING IT WRONG THE UMBRELLA ONE WOW BEAUTIFUL AND THE RUSSIAN SAGE OMG GORGEOUS! GORGEOUS! BEAUTIFUL! BEAUTIFUL! BEAUTIFUL! THANKS FOR INFO ON EVERYTHING LOVE IT ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ THANK YOU MR.SMITH MY GARDEN IS CALLING YOUR NAME...♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️ EVERY TIME I WATCHED YOUR VIDEO I LEARNED ALOT SO THANKS AGAIN.😀😀😀😀😀😀🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻
These are all so nice but I'm guessing these will all croak in pots on a full sun porch / balcony. Sad that YT search results can't find me full sun potted plants. Maybe there's just no such thing :'(
P Allen can you give me a list of plants and flowers that grow well near the sea. I have a house on the beach but not sure what to plant since salt and wind is a concern. Thank you.
Hi. I'm in SE Texas. I planted 3 little marigolds last year that were on clearance because they were hanging on by a thread and I've noticed this year, omggggggg it looks like they are EVERYWHERE. lol. Is that normal or is it possible that it's something else besides the marigolds? 🤔
Hi...you did a video on how to get rid of grubs but i cant remember the name of it or the video it was in to look back on. Can you let me know? It was something that you put on your lawn in the fall to kill the grubs so they dont come out in spring. Or at least try to prevent them 😆
Thank You! Tampa Bay, sun, sun & more sun....wish for your encyclopedia of knowledge & here you are @ our fingertips! WEDU & Create Star for years and years & “By George, right here all the time on lengthy, everything I ever wanted to know!” UA-cam! ( Great- Grand, Great Uncle & Father all involved in creating Cornell’s programs 1800’s onward!) oh how they’d enjoy you, Plz always carryon & keep the “Message Alive”...
The climate in the north of NZ is not unlike southern California and lantana, agapanthus and buddleia are all either banned or discouraged here. They are simply too invasive, so be warned.
GREAT information today - timely for summer. Thanks for the transplant information on Althea! I trimmed out the lower branches and it looks fantastic in my little kitchen garden for now since I have full sun all summer and it sort of protects the others from our extreme heat.
Allen I loved working in the flower gardens with the woman but I had to work with the guys to there was alot of jelousy of me because I worked with the woman in the gardens
UA-cam
You all probably dont give a shit but does someone know of a way to get back into an instagram account??
I was dumb forgot the login password. I would love any help you can give me!
@Marshall Angelo Instablaster :)
@Jadiel Fox i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im in the hacking process atm.
Seems to take a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
This man is calming to the mind love his Arkansas setting 👍😊.
I don't get the grief about "old fashioned " plants. Plants are plants and they are beautiful. Thank you for all the great information.
I've loved this wise man for 25 years; and, I've learned SO much from him~Thank you! I could listen to Mr. Allen read the phone book! ;)
I have Althea everywhere! Absolutely love them. I love my Zinnias too!🐞🐝🌻
Cosmos and Hollyhocks also hold up to the heat and they reseed themselves so great on the budget!
Loved the Hot Days gardening tips. I too love Russian Sage. Honey Bees are getting rarer and rarer here. Thank you for beeing (intentional misspell) their advocate. They need one. I wish more people would realize the poisons are broad spectrum and kill more than the intended target. Another viewer said they would like the tours to be longer. I agree!! The tours are wonderful. Longer would be great! And don't worry about repeating. Viewing garden beauty and getting good gardening tips more than once is a joy, not a fault. I would love to see the Rose Garden repeatedly as the different varieties come into bloom (with subtitles identifying who is in flower). And I would love to see a Hummingbird plant special tour/blog.
I put a Russian sage down by my mailbox and didn’t realize how many bees it attracted, I had to take it out for the mailman 😂
Plenty good advice. No problem with 'old fashioned'. Maybe because I'm old myself, lol.
I absolutely love Rose of Sharon, and all of the flowers that you also love!
I so enjoy these "Master Classes" with the Master! Thank you for continuing to provide details and information to those f us who are always interested in learning more! Appreciating you in Kansas!🌻🌻🌻
WHO doesn’t love zinnia or Althea?
The old girls are still reliable and lovely.
All these plants are awesome for the hot climates especially in Africa. I'm looking at them for our Liberian landscapes ideas. Thank you.
Excellent. Relaxing voice.
I love Rose of Sharon! They are absolutely stunning.
Thank you so much for all this great information. My backyard is like a dessert so hot but now! I’m going to be working on it to make it a super happy and beautiful place for all. And yes please talk all you want on plants I could listen for hours. ❤️
Love the names at the bottom!!! Very helpful
Really appreciate the names listed. Great addition to the videos.
R Darrett 👍🏼👍🏼 noted 😁
Thank you for this great information. Especially regarding the Hyssop. I always find your videos inspiring and informative.
Zinnias too common ????? I wouldn’t garden without them. They are AMAZING
I love zinnias
Zinnias have always brought me the most compliments in my gardens. They are very tolerant of heat and very intolerant of overwatering. My kind of compliment plant.
Thanks for the tips and list of flowers. Mostly interested in perennials. Certain annuals I always put out but want more flowers that return year after year. Well done video.
Cannas are gorgeous here on the gulf coast. They are VERY heat tolerant.
I haven't seen your videos for a while I just ran across them today and with all this concern about this covid-19 virus this gave me a lot of positive feelings you always have a insightful and knowledgeable video of your perennials and annuals you give me hope about our future that we should go out and enjoy life and plant life before all this disruption they came into our lives I wish you a happy summer God bless you
Pat Mandolla be sure to ring the 🔔 to get notifications.
@@PAllenSmith ok
Hi! My husband and I have been married a year and have just recently moved into a house and started our first garden together. We're loving it! We've discovered that we have different tastes in plants; he likes really exotic, tropical looking plants whereas I go for more native, naturalistic-looking plantings for our 7b/8a zone in the foothills of SC. What are some plants that marry the two styles, or plant combinations that can blend our tastes for a happy cohesive garden? Thanks!
I grow hardy banana (musa basjoo) and canna along with more traditional flowers in my zone 7a garden in NJ. I put the banana and canna in the back, since they’re tall, and the shorter flowers in front. It gives you a great tropical look.
I love the rose of sharon, they remind me of a tropical plants
I all these plants except Coneflowers. I will definitely have to give them a try in our Texas zone 8a. Thanks for all your information and expertise!
I agree, Altheas are fantastic plants-beautiful foliage and flowers. Anyone who dismisses them as “old-fashioned” is not a true garden lover. The new trailing zinnias are great as a low maintenance border or in pots in a hot, sunny location.
Those orange sun patiens are so pretty 🦋🐛🐝🐞🐜🌸🌼🌺🌻
Those tiny yellow finches love coneflower as they’re going to seed.
Love Rose of Sharon or Althea, is beautiful. Drought resistant and a staple for Texas gardens. Also Crepe Myrtle . Flowers and offers dapple shade for any ground plants, Good information.
Thank you so much for all the info. Just bought some echinaceas yesterday. Got 1 butterfly bush. Need at least 2 more lol. Your gardens are gorgeous 😍
Thank you for you all info.. beautiful flowers..i love it
Thanks for the tip! I had not considered creeping jenny for my garden path.
I'm in south central OK, my lantana is not doing well this year. I can't determine what is different from previous years. However, vincas are thriving. They love the heat and sunshine. I've always ignored them in the past thinking they were too plain and going for the petunias, but I've already yanked out all sad petunias while vincas are putting on quite the show. Thanks for the videos full of wonderful info!! And, your tours are just so much fun!
Thank you for your advice. It's great that you tell us the upkeep and how to keep some of these re-blooming. I wish you'd mention whether these are invasive? I understand that is often a characteristic of plants that are drought tolerant and deer resistant.I love the idea of perennials, but I want them to stay where I plant them and not crowd out others. Thanks
Excellent tutorial as per usual. I had no idea that mixing types can help each grow heartier.
We are growing the plants that are mentioned. Our problem is the terrible clay dirt. Hoping this year they look better... thanks so much for your video.
Robyn zone 7 - Thanks for the info there are a few plants that I've seen in gardens but now that you've given me some info on them - Im now interested in planting them in my garden. But like you stated in the video regarding the Rose of Sharon 😩 as soon as the picture came on the screen my whole body flinched. I don't care for them because of how my neighbors plant always seeds always drop on my side. I'm constantly have to pull up those little seedlings from my yard. Are there any Rose of Sharon that don't drop seeds?
I live at 7000 feet in the Southern California mountains, my son lives nearby at 6,665 feet. I can't grow many of the same plants he does. In fact, if you go down the "hill" to 6,500 feet, you will find beautiful flower and vegetable gardens growing in the summer months. My question is: Are plants affected by atmosphere and pressure? I can tell you that 75 degrees here feels like 95 degrees down in the valley because of the thinner air.
Especially timely, thanks!!!
I very like your idea thank you for you sharing for this video.
I observed that the butterfly species in many of your pictures is called a pipeline swallowtail. If you want these in your yard, and I do, they have a beautiful metallic blue wing like no other butterfly in North America, you need to plant a vine called a pipe line. It is a native American plant. Rather slow grower but it does tend to go for walks underground so put it where you can let it romp.
Lady Bugs looove Yarrow!! they will stay in your garden as long as you have what they like to eat.
Flowers...!!! 💕
I love flowers...!!! 💕
God is awesome...!!! 💕
Rose of Sharon are gorgeous...💕
All your VLOG information is appreciated.
I know right! They are ALL wonderful
Stunning description for especially a new to the creative process as a new gardener! Thanks
Thank you
going to get some hyssop today after watching this video❤
I so enjoy your knowledge and it shows your Love of plants! Could you make a show on growing flowers in Colorado?
Love the white cone flower! Also love QueenAnna’s lace!
Are these Perennials needs to watered often? Second question.. i these -coming back year after year ?
Hello Mr. Smith I absolutely love your farm and your you tube channel. I need some advise I’m new to gardening . I have a wet corner from the ac drain pipe what can I plant on a wet summer spot n dry in winter? I’m in Charlotte NC zone 7b - 8a thank you for your help. Mayra
Such great information. Thank you
Thanks for your inspiration of flowers. We have a beach house at the outer Banks NC & we have our back year is closed in with white fence. Would love to plant perennials but its sandy hot soil. Any suggestions? Plus very salty air..
I live in the Carolinas and went on vacation in june for a week. The temperature rose to 90 degrees. The sun patients in my flower boxes never died . I use the wire flower boxes with the coconut fiber. The baskets go dry quickly even when I line them with plastic. This is the first year I have not had to replant my flower boxes. Love my sun patients.
Fantastic information
I remember a wonderful smelling flower that I could grow in Louisiana in winter. It was called stock. Nurseries no longer carry this spicy treat--at least, wherever I tried, even online. Do you know why it is no longer available even in seed form?
You can get stock seeds online, and actually, one of my local nurseries has some pots they've grown out. (Note to self: go buy some tomorrow!) I think it's coming back into awareness, like a lot of those good old lovely plants we grew up with!
All great ideas, thanks for sharing. I agree with you and the rose of Sharon's. A great one for blooming all summer.
Great info on sun loving flowers. I just bought a “Miss Molly” butterfly bush thanks to you. I was wondering how far do I need to cut it back? And also when?
Not sure if this type blooms on old or new wood. Thanks for the great tips you share.
Check our this tour. I talk a lot about butterfly bush around 2:30. ua-cam.com/video/3l2740bieC8/v-deo.html
Stunning garden pictures but how DO you keep the Japanese beetles from devouring everything?
What deterrent could keep the fine thick tree roots from choking the garden? They show up under the surface everywhere we feed and water, and when we dig even after a hard rain the soil is very dry . They even come up through weed block into raised garden and take over in one season.
Red bird of paradise aka pride of Barbados is amazing in full sun under the hottest conditions in the desert ... and like that Russian sage, if you give it a ‘top trim’ (not necessarily in half) maybe about 8” to 12” (its a good five to six feet high plant) the blooms will revigorate even more so , but letting them go all summer, they are still wonderful bloomers regardless... in nov or December it’s good to cut them way back and by March you will have vigorous re growth with a large beautiful bloomer until October ... might be a cool plant to try in other areas outside the tropics and the desert
Awesome information. Thanks a lot .
Full of great knowledge!🌸🌹🎈
I do love zinnias! do you think Russian sage and zinnia's make a good pair in the garden?
Great video!
Where do you buy Sunpatient seeds! Love them thank you very informative.
I live in the DFW area and I would like to know what grows well in the northern side. It gets quite warm here even in the shade. I recently bought an astilbe and I hope it does well in this area.
OMG!!! I LOVE IT I KNOW SUNFLOWER MAKES A GARDEN LOOKS SO BEAUTIFUL JUST THE YELLOW BRINGS OUT BRIGHTNESS WOW THAT'S HOW YOU SAY IT YAROO LOL MAYBE IM SAYING IT WRONG THE UMBRELLA ONE WOW BEAUTIFUL AND THE RUSSIAN SAGE OMG GORGEOUS! GORGEOUS! BEAUTIFUL! BEAUTIFUL! BEAUTIFUL! THANKS FOR INFO ON EVERYTHING LOVE IT ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ THANK YOU MR.SMITH MY GARDEN IS CALLING YOUR NAME...♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
EVERY TIME I WATCHED YOUR VIDEO I LEARNED ALOT SO THANKS AGAIN.😀😀😀😀😀😀🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻
Great information. Thankyou.
Good video.
Thanks for sharing.I love the rose of sharon plant.I hope to find one in Trinidad.👍🌹🌻
These are all so nice but I'm guessing these will all croak in pots on a full sun porch / balcony. Sad that YT search results can't find me full sun potted plants. Maybe there's just no such thing :'(
Hi, I'm N. California coastal. I have problems with too much wind and damp coolness. I have great soil.
P Allen can you give me a list of plants and flowers that grow well near the sea. I have a house on the beach but not sure what to plant since salt and wind is a concern. Thank you.
23 minutes went by fast! Exciting talk!
Great information👍 I am a new gardener & enjoy your show. Thanks for sharing
Hi. I'm in SE Texas. I planted 3 little marigolds last year that were on clearance because they were hanging on by a thread and I've noticed this year, omggggggg it looks like they are EVERYWHERE. lol. Is that normal or is it possible that it's something else besides the marigolds? 🤔
Absolutely normal. I've seen them do that in MO.
Rose of Sharon is a type of Hypericum in the UK . It is better to use latin names if possible..I think the US.one is a mallow?
🐝🐝🐝🐝🐝👍👍🤓 I’m getting attached to my bees! I feel like they’re counting on me. 😉. Not going to let ‘em down. Must plant more Russian sage.
I love Russian sage 🐝
Hi...you did a video on how to get rid of grubs but i cant remember the name of it or the video it was in to look back on. Can you let me know? It was something that you put on your lawn in the fall to kill the grubs so they dont come out in spring. Or at least try to prevent them 😆
It's 107 today here in Sacramento, California!
We bought some perennial lantana from our Master Gardeners and it has come back. We are zone 7A/6B in Baxter County.
Butterfly bush man! I had a hard time with it. Would not do well no matter what I do with it. Bloomed but did not grow new branches .
Hyssop, coneflower, Russian sage, sunflower 🌻, ZINNIAS 💗💕💗💕
What is good to plant for fall I live in Birmingham al need help please Shirley Jackson
Can you propagate agastache from cuttings under mist?
Thank you !
What do you mean, "Loves The Sun 🌞 and Heat " ( Las Vegas?)
I have a spot in front of house that gets a lot of sun and heat that collects a lot of water when it rains. What's the best thing to plant?
Iris would do well.
Love your advices...Thanks...👏❤🙌❤👏❤
I love the show. Can you turn Allen’s voice up? Thank you.
I plant april or may,zinnas and when they start blooming in june they go till fall
Love this video so much! Thank you, 😊🤗
Thanks 😊
Thank You! Tampa Bay, sun, sun & more sun....wish for your encyclopedia of knowledge & here you are @ our fingertips! WEDU & Create Star for years and years & “By George, right here all the time on lengthy, everything I ever wanted to know!” UA-cam! ( Great- Grand, Great Uncle & Father all involved in creating Cornell’s programs 1800’s onward!) oh how they’d enjoy you, Plz always carryon & keep the “Message Alive”...
Would these flowers do well in Arizona summer?
I think they be ok, as long as you could keep them watered consistently. They do not like to dry up. (Although they can bounce back nicely)
@@PAllenSmith thank you!
Thank you
You can eat daylilies ??
I like it. really
Hi Sir, I'm new to indoor gardening and I have a dracaena marginata plant it going to die please help me how to save that from Saudi Arabia
The climate in the north of NZ is not unlike southern California and lantana, agapanthus and buddleia are all either banned or discouraged here. They are simply too invasive, so be warned.
I have grown Hyssop as a herb, in Europe, can you tell me if this is a different plant, the leaves I think look different, larger.