🌼💖 ENDLESS BLOOMS! 15 Long BLOOMING Perennials to Keep Your Garden VIBRANT! 😍🌸
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- Опубліковано 16 тра 2024
- Experience a garden that never stops giving with "ENDLESS BLOOMS! 15 Long BLOOMING Perennials to Keep Your Garden VIBRANT!" This video is your guide to selecting perennials that promise vibrant colors and continuous blooms from spring through fall. Say goodbye to fleeting flowers and hello to a garden brimming with life and color all season long. From the sun-loving Salvia to the shade-tolerant Astilbe, these plants are picked for their unbeatable longevity and beauty. Dive into our list and transform your garden into an endless display of floral splendor!
What You'll Discover:
A curated list of 15 perennials known for their long blooming periods, ensuring your garden stays vibrant and colorful.
Detailed insights on each plant's care requirements, bloom times, and tips for optimal growth.
Inspiration for garden designs that maximize the visual impact and enjoyment of your perennial blooms.
Why Watch This Video:
Maximize the blooming potential of your garden with plants that offer months of color.
Learn how to select the right perennials for continuous blooms in any garden setting.
Embrace gardening strategies that lead to a lush, vibrant, and endlessly blooming garden.
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Have a favorite long-blooming perennial or a tip for extending the bloom season? COMMENT below and join the conversation with our gardening community!
🌼💖 ENDLESS BLOOMS! 15 Long BLOOMING Perennials to Keep Your Garden VIBRANT! 😍🌸
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⏱ Chapters
00:00 Intro
00:39 Black-Eyed Susan
01:42 Garden Phlox
02:43 Blanket Flower
03:48 Pincushion Flower
04:40 Perennial Geranium
05:42 Clematis
06:42 Hardy Hibiscus
07:37 Threadleaf Coreopsis
08:38 Daylily
09:28 Dianthus
10:25 Catmint
11:23 False Sunflower
12:24 Salvia
13:25 Yarrow
14:26 Lavender
15:25 Outro
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Black eyed susan, tall phlox, blanket flower, pincushion flower, perennial geranium, Clematis, hardy hibiscus, threadleaf Coreopsis, daylily, dianthus, catmint, false sunflower, salvia, Yarrow, lavender,
Thank you for a nice variety. I am glad you have lots of bee and butterfly friendly plants. ❤
Try nasturtiums! Easy to grow in full or half-day sun, plant around April 10 and they'll come up in 10-14 days then bloom constantly with their different colored blooms from May until first frost. When allowed to dry after they die back with the first frost, they provide seeds that look like a wrinkled garbanzo bean for the next year. Container gardening at its easiest! Just water every day and feed and sprinkle with slug killer once a month. No deadheading and the blooms are edible!
Thank you for sharing such a fantastic tip about nasturtiums! They really are a wonderful choice for gardeners looking for low-maintenance and vibrant blooms. Their ease of growth, both in gardens and containers, makes them particularly appealing, not to mention the added bonus of edible flowers that can brighten up salads and dishes. Your detailed advice on care, including watering, feeding, and managing pests, is invaluable for anyone looking to add nasturtiums to their garden. I'm sure many gardeners will be inspired to try them out with your guidance. Happy gardening and enjoy those beautiful, edible blooms! 🌼
Thanks!
The leaves and seeds are also edible. The leaves are nice in a sandwich, tasting peppery like watercress
Thank you, This was very interestng. I appreciated that you added the common and botanical names.
Thank You!!
Wonderful video, thank you for sharing this with us ❤😊❤
Beautiful 😍 Thanks for sharing this video. I appreciate it very much 🙏
Thanks, I just moved from Oregon, to New Mexico, and I'm just beginning to landscape.
I have a jungle of hibiscus plants in my garden and i will try your tip my good friend
wow, amazing work! thank you....
Thanks so much for a very inspirational video and thanks for sharing so many beautiful plants and flowers with us. Hugs and kisses from grandma Sandy and Debbie.
Did i miss Ice plant? That thing blooms 8 months in zone 7b.
You missed out penstemons -- long flowering, cold resistant..minimal care
Beautifully done.
Informative video..thank you. Zone 9, south central Georgia.
Where can I get those plants?
I wish my lavender would spread
This is the time of year to try cuttings. There are lots of how to videos. I'm trying it for the first time. I bought an aluminum foil turkey roaster with a clear lid, and punched holes in the top and bottom, filled it with potting soil, took some cuttings dipped in rooting hormone. It's in a sheltered spot on my deck. Pretty cheap experiment.
I love gardening but sadly this year I have to give heavy work a miss after surgery. An interesting 15. I had a pack of cat mint plugs that just vanished in a week. Achillia gave up after 2 yrs. I had a strip of day lillies & the dog sat on them as he wanted a sunbathing spot. The strip was from next door & was 10 ftx 3ft or more.. My clematis was about 60 ft long once & I accidentally cut it leaving a honey suckle. Yikes
It sounds like you’ve had quite the gardening adventure, even with a few mishaps along the way! Taking a step back from heavy gardening work post-surgery is wise, but I hope you can still enjoy your garden's beauty and maybe focus on less demanding tasks.
It’s unfortunate about the catmint and Achillea, and losing your clematis must have been quite a surprise, especially after it had grown so impressively. Sometimes our plant friends face unexpected challenges, from enthusiastic dogs seeking a sunny spot to simple human errors.
As you recover, perhaps consider planting some low-maintenance perennials or setting up a small container garden that doesn’t require much bending or heavy lifting. Gardening can be therapeutic, and with some adjustments, it can still be a part of your recovery process. If you need suggestions for plants that require less care or tips on easier gardening methods, feel free to ask. Wishing you a speedy recovery and many more joyful moments in your garden! 🌻🌿
It's all nice and dandy but, you might have mention that dead heading is important. As the Summer progresses, the dead/spent/ seed heads flowery leftovers don't look so nice anymore.
Most clematis variety will bloom for a very short time. Most. Very few will continue to bloom until first frost. Many (if not most) Phlox variety are very susceptible powdery mildew (such an "attractive" feature).
You make it sound as if no care is needed for those "endless blooms".
Dead heading is not minimum effort if you’re talking about a couple of hundred flowers which you can easily obtain. I think with a lot of effort would be more accurate. Unless you end up dead heading the way I end up doing with a lawn mower.
Love the video. Thanks
Be careful with lavender, it can take over.
That's a good point! Lavender is indeed a beautiful and fragrant plant, but it can be quite vigorous under the right conditions. It’s important for gardeners to manage its growth through regular pruning and by ensuring it doesn't spread beyond the intended area. This helps to keep lavender from overtaking other plants in the garden. Additionally, understanding the specific variety of lavender and its growth habits can aid in managing its spread effectively. Thanks for highlighting that!
I've never heard of lavender being invasive. What growing conditions?
I wish this was true for my area. I can't hardly get them to grow and overwintering is only possible if I put them in my greenhouse. If I put them in a large pot and keep them from drying out I can manage a few plants for a season.
But it's snowing today
What's a peetle?
You don't wanna know
😂😂😂
Great list: i don't care for the AI voice.
I couldn’t keep watching after “pee-dals” instead of petals haha
Hi , I was wondering if I could grow these in Colorado Springs. Thanks❤
Uh no. Deer adore Black Eyed Susan.
If plant in containers adds deer’s resistance along black eyes Susan seems to work for me
I have many deer-they leave my Black-Eyed Susan's alone.....they leave my Daisies alone which is planted with the Susan's...they do feed off young trees leaves...some phlox in the winter months..
Some of your flowers are ver evasive. Be careful where you plant.
Invasive
Invasive
Invasive not evasive.
Just a typo, no big deal, more importantly, which flowers r invasive ?
@@patw5550 the geraniums are the worst. Very deep roots. But most of them can be if planted in the wrong place. Small areas. And I live in zone 3-4. Can't imagine what they would be like in higher zones.