Omg, so many gorgeous things 💜🧡💛💚💙❤. We are putting in a new flower bed and I showed my hubby all of these , he said you choose honey. I got a look when I said all of them ! 😂🤷🏼♀️👩🌾 Happy Gardening
Jenny, so many distractions today, I have to watch twice. 🤭 First, you're standing beside one of my favorite trees: Chamaecyparis obtusa 'Gracilis' (dwarf Hinoki cypress). Then Brynna, always a scene stealer. And lastly, your hat looks similar to the double echinacea flowers you talked about and that made me smile. 😆 I can see I have to add some more plants to my wish list. Can you imagine pairing that heuchera with the Veronica? My garden overhaul plans are coming along. Now I have to review the plant stats so I have something in bloom all season long and heights are staggered. I am itching to get digging! But we have to melt a couple feet of snow first. For now, a girl can dream. 😍
Good morning Jenny. Thanks for the video. Once, I get all the shrubs that I bought last year into the ground, my focus is going to be adding a few more perennials.
Oh these videos get me excited for all the plants I ordered to show up! I have most of these perennials coming this spring. Spring fever to the max right now! Thank you for sharing 🌼
Love the video, I was wanting to ask what is the evergreen tree to your left in the video. It is beautiful. Love all the content you and your husband put out .
Jenny, you’re really Rockin’ that cap - the Pom-Pom is almost as big as your head! It’s adorable!!! No wonder everybody wants one!!! You’re a fashion trend setter as well as a gardening icon!!! 😊
I love your energy and enthusiasm describing these fantastic plants! I appreciate the thoroughness. It is was fun last season watching you plant and maintain many of these. Though we have snow on the ground I am already so excited to add many of these to my garden having both sunny and shady areas. I can't wait to use my shovel again!
Thank you Jenny. You have reminded me that spring will still come. I’m here in zone eight Southern California and we are in a white out blizzard expecting 5 feet of snow.
I live in the Finger Lakes region of New York State and we are finally having Winter😜. Garden centers here will start getting plants in April. I am impatient😵
Ha! It’s been so warm I was surprised to see you in a coat and hat. Love all the perennials ❤ looking forward to having some of these beautiful bloomss🌸
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love them ! Thanks for the advice on those! We love phlox as well! They continue blooming when all of our other have faded! 😀😀
Same here. I've replaced several times and last year I found a coleus in similar caramel color and may just go that route. Laura @Garden Answer recently mentioned some varieties with which she's had more success.
@@Edu_Kate In my experience, it really helps to plant them in the canopy of larger trees. These plants need very well draining soil - particularly in winter. The trees - shed that water during rain and snows. That is why you hear they do well in containers. That being said - there are just some cultivars that are tougher than others IMHO For me, when it comes to those colors - Sweet Tea heucherella is my go to. Zone 6 New England
Good morning, Jenny ☕️ Thanks for a great list of new plants. I’m running out of real estate! 😂 The Summerific Hybiscus are my favorite. I got my hands on 7 of them for a hedge last year and cannot wait to see what they are going to look like this year. 🙌🏻
Such an informative video! Love this. Thank you so much for explaining the details of these plants so well!!! Added a few to my wish list! ❤ ready for spring!
I'm digging up the two Summerific Hibiscus I planted a couple years ago. I can not keep up with the amount of water they need. I think my sister is going to take them. I'm trying to plant waterwise perennials.
Wish you could do a video about zones 10 & 11. Seems like almost everything is 3-9. Not sure how big your list would be with plants you have experience with that also grow in 10/11.
I laughed out loud literally when I heard you say visit your garden center more than once in the spring I’ll visit my gardens nurseries, at least once a week in my area that there are several, and I make the rounds back in September. I was lucky one of the nurseries had the lilac crush hibiscus. Yay. I got two of them and they were on sale because it was the end of the season
Was wondering if you could highlight decorative perennial grasses that are sterile. There is nothing worse than trying to corral a plant that gets wild. Also, for those grasses that can go wild can you give us some ideas in how to contain them. Much appreciation and ❤ your energy.
Obsessed with that color green!😍 Is that also from Lisa? Raspberry Agastaki and One in a Melon Echinacea are the first plants on my list to grab this year! Can’t wait for our nurseries to have them🌼🌸
Good morning Jenny, great info. I need to get some color in our landscape. I love boxwood & holy but the previous owners have overdone it with these as foundation plantings. Since we are in 7b also, do you recommend a combination of cooler colored flowering perennials? Definitely hot and humid here in southern Virginia. Have a wonderful weekend 🌧️🌧️
Question about the Upscale Monarda....will it still be good for drying to make tea? I have the old-timey Monarda, and love herbal tea made from it...but, man, am I tired of trying to make that plant stay in its spot in the herb garden! Wondering if the new variety was just as tasty?
Oh, yee of little faith. Gardening has become such a HUGELY popular hobby. People always find funds for what they most care about. It's known as budgeting.
If I had space for only one Veronica, I would go with White Wands. That plant not only is long blooming, and needs no deadheading - it is without a doubt one of the biggest draws for bees in our garden. It is a really great plant, and at least for me, is getting hard to find with all the new intros onto the market
Good Morning Jenny please please please would you do a pet lovers yard for all of us with fur babies-teaching us which plants are safe-unsafe and most compatible for all animals( preferably dog&cats) while giving us tips and tricks on how to provide a happy and healthy garden environment for everyone in the family Thank you so much 🐶🪴😺
Great information, thank you. You look so cozy in that hat😊. I was attracted to the dark green evergreen on your left, could you let us know it's variety/name please. Regards from Ontario, Canada, zone 5
I am wondering, I live in 5a and really want to add the Summerific Hibiscus. But I am wondering are they a Japanese beetle magnet? And if they are, how in the world can you keep them away? I so hate those bugs but really want this plant. As always thank so much for sharing all the great time and effort in your videos!
I am in zone 5b and had a small green caterpillar totally skeletonize all of my Hibiscus within a week after they started blooming! Tried the recommended sprays, but nothing stopped the destruction. This caterpillar did not attack any other plant in my garden except for my field of Cleome.
Those nasty bugs! Now, last year, they didn't do quite as much damage as the previous year. I wonder if it's due to using the Bayers 3-in-1 rose care. I got it off Jerry and Jenny's Amazon store. This year I will use it more regularly, though it's not organic. I have an apple tree nearby. Also a JB favorite.
I have trouble with heuchera. I don’t know if it is my soil or watering. If I put them in pots then will I have to bring them in the shed or garage during the winter to keep as a perennial or could they stay outside in concrete pots and survive?
It all depends on where you live and your hardiness zone compared to the plant’s hardiness zone. As long as the plant is 1-2 zones colder than your climate you can live it outside all winter. If you are a southerner like me, you will want to look for heucheras of the villosa species as they are native to the southeast & can handle our heat & humidity so much better. Success with heucheras is largely dependent on finding the right cultivars for your climate 😊
Sorry to say I am having trouble with sooo many words to explain what plants will or won’t do. Love you and Jenny and all the wonderful flower information but could we please use less adjectives for while speaking.
[1] It's NOT " Agastackie " ! Agastache is pronounced "a-guh-stash" . Anything that is spelled tache at the end is pronounced as "tash". Most people just say Hyssops as the common name. [2] Astilbe's [Dark Side of the Moon] is lovely💚 and can be fun to work with,, as long as the surrounding plants don't distract and overwhelm them. [3] Giggling at dropping pages on the ground. Was that for Brenna to play with? [4] Heuchera [Coral bells ] is also pronunciated " hoo- kr- uh". I simply love 💞 these plants in waves [not straight lines]. You guys should carry Heuchera Master Painter 'Van Gogh' series. They are to die for,, in the landscapes. Such gorgeous foliage. [5] Phlox is such a wonderful standard to any garden. I like the historic plants so much from the 60's and 70's. Even better that they are coming out with such wonderful color blends. [6] Love, LOVE, L O V E 💚, Pulmonaria [aka Lungwort- but especially Pink-a-blue ] in the gardens. [7] Seriously GREAT JOB with the descriptions and performance details. I love that you are detailing the actual information to help novice gardeners with helpful suggestions. 😁
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!
You look so cute with that big puff ball beenie! The thumbnail made me smile so big ! 🌷
Me too!!
I just wanted to say that Jenny you look so great in hats. Not everyone can pull off hats as well as you do.
This hat reminded me of the double echinacea she talked about and it made me smile. 🤭
I grew hyssop from seeds and it was sangria. A peachy pink color. Just love it.
Omg, so many gorgeous things 💜🧡💛💚💙❤. We are putting in a new flower bed and I showed my hubby all of these , he said you choose honey. I got a look when I said all of them ! 😂🤷🏼♀️👩🌾 Happy Gardening
Very informative. I have to say sweet girl running back and forth and you were able to stay on task, kudos! Wild pretty pup!!
Jenny, so many distractions today, I have to watch twice. 🤭
First, you're standing beside one of my favorite trees: Chamaecyparis obtusa 'Gracilis' (dwarf Hinoki cypress). Then Brynna, always a scene stealer. And lastly, your hat looks similar to the double echinacea flowers you talked about and that made me smile. 😆
I can see I have to add some more plants to my wish list. Can you imagine pairing that heuchera with the Veronica?
My garden overhaul plans are coming along. Now I have to review the plant stats so I have something in bloom all season long and heights are staggered.
I am itching to get digging! But we have to melt a couple feet of snow first.
For now, a girl can dream. 😍
Ohhh girl!!! I found more than one or two.🤣🤣 I have several screenshots.
Thank you!
Gorgeous collection 🍃🌺🍃
❤ love this pen 🖊️ and paper 📄 ready
That was one terrific hat !
Again Jenny you have made a great informative video, you give us so much information and add in the excitement! ❤
Good morning Jenny. Thanks for the video. Once, I get all the shrubs that I bought last year into the ground, my focus is going to be adding a few more perennials.
Can't wait to get my hands on some more echinacia!!
Beautiful ❤️
Thanks Jenny.❄️💚🙃
Good job, thanks. Lots of info.
Sipping coffee, looking at my blooming tulip magnolia, dreaming of putting so many of these plants in my garden!
Thanks Jenny for index card plant info.. shows well in your presentation
Oh these videos get me excited for all the plants I ordered to show up! I have most of these perennials coming this spring. Spring fever to the max right now! Thank you for sharing 🌼
Love the video, I was wanting to ask what is the evergreen tree to your left in the video. It is beautiful. Love all the content you and your husband put out .
Chamaecyparis obtusa 'Gracilis' (dwarf Hinoki cypress)
It's on my wish list.
Jenny, you’re really Rockin’ that cap - the Pom-Pom is almost as big as your head! It’s adorable!!! No wonder everybody wants one!!! You’re a fashion trend setter as well as a gardening icon!!! 😊
That Hibiscus is beautiful.
It really is!
Dang, the quality of this video is amazing👍🏼
Thank you !!
I love your energy and enthusiasm describing these fantastic plants! I appreciate the thoroughness. It is was fun last season watching you plant and maintain many of these. Though we have snow on the ground I am already so excited to add many of these to my garden having both sunny and shady areas. I can't wait to use my shovel again!
What a great vdeo. Love seeing your pup playing too. Thanks for all the plant details.
Your welcome
Thank you Jenny. You have reminded me that spring will still come. I’m here in zone eight Southern California and we are in a white out blizzard expecting 5 feet of snow.
Love watching your videos they are so refreshing during these cool rainy days cant wait till i can start putting out flowers
Oh here we go again! LOVE your hat! ❄️💚🙃
I live in the Finger Lakes region of New York State and we are finally having Winter😜. Garden centers here will start getting plants in April. I am impatient😵
Good morning Jenny. Love watching your videos .
Your hat is very cute on you! All of those plants were beautiful! My choice will be looking for the lilac hibiscus! Thank you Jenny for the video.
Very informative content. Thank you!
Hey, dear! Thank you so much for this very informative video! I like veronica, I have this perennial in my garden. It looks great!
Thank you for your information I looking to start a new garden bed so I will be looking for those plants that you mentioned.
Ha! It’s been so warm I was surprised to see you in a coat and hat.
Love all the perennials ❤ looking forward to having some of these beautiful bloomss🌸
Raspberry Beret , I think I love her ! Lol Definitely a must have in my garden
Enjoy your videos!! Visited the nursery today and bought some hydrangeas!
Thanks for coming!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love them ! Thanks for the advice on those! We love phlox as well! They continue blooming when all of our other have faded! 😀😀
Same here. I've replaced several times and last year I found a coleus in similar caramel color and may just go that route.
Laura @Garden Answer recently mentioned some varieties with which she's had more success.
@@Edu_Kate In my experience, it really helps to plant them in the canopy of larger trees. These plants need very well draining soil - particularly in winter. The trees - shed that water during rain and snows. That is why you hear they do well in containers. That being said - there are just some cultivars that are tougher than others IMHO For me, when it comes to those colors - Sweet Tea heucherella is my go to. Zone 6 New England
Good morning, Jenny ☕️ Thanks for a great list of new plants. I’m running out of real estate! 😂 The Summerific Hybiscus are my favorite. I got my hands on 7 of them for a hedge last year and cannot wait to see what they are going to look like this year. 🙌🏻
Just know they are late to show growth. You'll think they died, but they are just taking their sweet time emerging.
@@Edu_Kate thank you for the reminder to be patient! 😌
Such an informative video! Love this. Thank you so much for explaining the details of these plants so well!!! Added a few to my wish list! ❤ ready for spring!
Great video! I definitely found two to add to my list for this year
This was so great! I am so ready for the Ecanachea series!!
Thanks for all the information. I must visit very soon. We have clay soil which is hard to grow in.
I agree
I'm digging up the two Summerific Hibiscus I planted a couple years ago. I can not keep up with the amount of water they need. I think my sister is going to take them. I'm trying to plant waterwise perennials.
Jenny and Proven Winners, what a great team!! So much info which is exactly what I was looking for. Thank you!
Pam 6a
What is the evergreen tree that is near you in this video? I love it!
Wish you could do a video about zones 10 & 11. Seems like almost everything is 3-9. Not sure how big your list would be with plants you have experience with that also grow in 10/11.
Wonderful video, Jenny, really interested in the more cultivated monarda varieties. I’m thinking the red with verbena bonariensis. 💕
I laughed out loud literally when I heard you say visit your garden center more than once in the spring I’ll visit my gardens nurseries, at least once a week in my area that there are several, and I make the rounds back in September. I was lucky one of the nurseries had the lilac crush hibiscus. Yay. I got two of them and they were on sale because it was the end of the season
Thank you for the information!
Question 🙋🏻♀️ Jenny!
Are you guys going to ship
plants this season??????
Thank you 🙏🏻
Sherry-Knoxville
Was wondering if you could highlight decorative perennial grasses that are sterile. There is nothing worse than trying to corral a plant that gets wild. Also, for those grasses that can go wild can you give us some ideas in how to contain them. Much appreciation and ❤ your energy.
Obsessed with that color green!😍 Is that also from Lisa? Raspberry Agastaki and One in a Melon Echinacea are the first plants on my list to grab this year! Can’t wait for our nurseries to have them🌼🌸
Such gorgeousness! I’m searching for something for my morning sun, irrigated planter boxes - Zone 10b. Maybe I could push some of these! 🌿🌺
Love the hat . Where did you get it ? If you don’t mind sharing.
Good morning Jenny, great info. I need to get some color in our landscape. I love boxwood & holy but the previous owners have overdone it with these as foundation plantings. Since we are in 7b also, do you recommend a combination of cooler colored flowering perennials? Definitely hot and humid here in southern Virginia. Have a wonderful weekend 🌧️🌧️
Question about the Upscale Monarda....will it still be good for drying to make tea? I have the old-timey Monarda, and love herbal tea made from it...but, man, am I tired of trying to make that plant stay in its spot in the herb garden! Wondering if the new variety was just as tasty?
I suspect PW sales this year are going to decrease quite a bit. Expendable income is decreasing quite a bit across the US.
Oh, yee of little faith.
Gardening has become such a HUGELY popular hobby.
People always find funds for what they most care about. It's known as budgeting.
What if you can’t get proven winners where you live or can’t afford proven winners? Do you have any chipper chicken verities? Thank you 😊
If I had space for only one Veronica, I would go with White Wands. That plant not only is long blooming, and needs no deadheading - it is without a doubt one of the biggest draws for bees in our garden. It is a really great plant, and at least for me, is getting hard to find with all the new intros onto the market
I love my White Wands and have several! My understanding is Ever After acts the same way, I’m hoping to find some this year.
I had that on my wish list. I have color-theme gardens and white and purple/blue are in a couple spots. So I can have both varieties. Win win.
I'm in Catawba Co....
I need to buy a bigger property so I can plant all the new introductions every year! Ha!
Good Morning Jenny please please please would you do a pet lovers yard for all of us with fur babies-teaching us which plants are safe-unsafe and most compatible for all animals( preferably dog&cats) while giving us tips and tricks on how to provide a happy and healthy garden environment for everyone in the family Thank you so much 🐶🪴😺
Great information, thank you. You look so cozy in that hat😊. I was attracted to the dark green evergreen on your left, could you let us know it's variety/name please. Regards from Ontario, Canada, zone 5
Chamaecyparis obtusa 'Gracilis' or dwarf Hinoki cypress.
It's on my wish list.
Two more moths to go!
I am wondering, I live in 5a and really want to add the Summerific Hibiscus. But I am wondering are they a Japanese beetle magnet? And if they are, how in the world can you keep them away? I so hate those bugs but really want this plant. As always thank so much for sharing all the great time and effort in your videos!
I am in zone 5b and had a small green caterpillar totally skeletonize all of my Hibiscus within a week after they started blooming! Tried the recommended sprays, but nothing stopped the destruction. This caterpillar did not attack any other plant in my garden except for my field of Cleome.
That is what I am afraid of. Thanks for sharing
Those nasty bugs!
Now, last year, they didn't do quite as much damage as the previous year. I wonder if it's due to using the Bayers 3-in-1 rose care. I got it off Jerry and Jenny's Amazon store. This year I will use it more regularly, though it's not organic. I have an apple tree nearby. Also a JB favorite.
🙋
I have trouble with heuchera. I don’t know if it is my soil or watering. If I put them in pots then will I have to bring them in the shed or garage during the winter to keep as a perennial or could they stay outside in concrete pots and survive?
Me too. Sometimes they heave out of the ground. Laura @ Garden Answer recently mentioned a few varieties with which were more successful for her.
It all depends on where you live and your hardiness zone compared to the plant’s hardiness zone. As long as the plant is 1-2 zones colder than your climate you can live it outside all winter. If you are a southerner like me, you will want to look for heucheras of the villosa species as they are native to the southeast & can handle our heat & humidity so much better. Success with heucheras is largely dependent on finding the right cultivars for your climate 😊
@@GardeningwithCreekside Thank you for the info. I am in North Alabama, zone 7b. I purchased 2 Georgia Peach the other week and will give those a try.
👍👋
Ahem. There's a squirrel on top of your head.
Sorry to say I am having trouble with sooo many words to explain what plants will or won’t do. Love you and Jenny and all the wonderful flower information but could we please use less adjectives for while speaking.
I love her adjectives.
As Jenny tells us, Professor Google is our friend.
[1] It's NOT " Agastackie " !
Agastache is pronounced "a-guh-stash" . Anything that is spelled tache at the end is pronounced as "tash". Most people just say Hyssops as the common name.
[2] Astilbe's [Dark Side of the Moon] is lovely💚 and can be fun to work with,, as long as the surrounding plants don't distract and overwhelm them.
[3] Giggling at dropping pages on the ground. Was that for Brenna to play with?
[4] Heuchera [Coral bells ] is also pronunciated " hoo- kr- uh". I simply love 💞 these plants in waves [not straight lines].
You guys should carry Heuchera Master Painter 'Van Gogh' series. They are to die for,, in the landscapes. Such gorgeous foliage.
[5] Phlox is such a wonderful standard to any garden. I like the historic plants so much from the 60's and 70's. Even better that they are coming out with such wonderful color blends.
[6] Love, LOVE, L O V E 💚, Pulmonaria [aka Lungwort- but especially Pink-a-blue ] in the gardens.
[7] Seriously GREAT JOB with the descriptions and performance details. I love that you are detailing the actual information to help novice gardeners with helpful suggestions.
😁
Po tay to / po tah to
Pronunciations are subjective.
Do you say Clem ah tis OR Cle MAH tis? Both are right. Peony, too.
Really! The grammar police
I’m going to need a bigger garden. Every year, better and better plants! Thanks for all the info!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!
You've given so many options to try! We do struggle a bit with huchera, although we love theThey ! Thanks for for the advice on tho se! We love phlox as well!