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Cut Flower Gardening For Beautiful Bouquets By Terry Lowery Imagine
a never-ending supply of beautiful flowers for your home, bouquets and
arrangements to give to friends, flowers to pluck at will for gifts, get-well
visits, anniversaries and birthdays. By planting a garden stocked with
flowers that happily give up their blooms for your pleasure, you can have
fresh flower arrangements in every room in your home all throughout the
spring and summer. To create your own bouquet
garden, start with a sunny spot in your yard. A garden spot that gets 6 to 8
hours of direct sun a day is ideal. It should be within easy reach for
watering, since a cut flower garden will need daily watering during any dry
spells. You’ll also want to design it to make it easy for you to reach all
the flowers in it, so a raised bed that can be approached on four sides is
perfect. If you decide to plant against a fence or as a border, make sure
that you can get to all the plants without stepping on others by putting in
footpaths or trenches for walking. The best way to start your cut
flower garden is with bulbs planted in the autumn. Daffodils and tulips are
among the most popular spring bouquet flowers. By getting them in the ground
in the autumn, you’ll be able to start cutting early in the spring. Some more unusual
spring-flowering bulbs that make gorgeous cut flowers include: Giant flowering onion – Grows
3-4 feet tall, with huge purple blooms. Great as a back border in a cut
flower garden. Blossoms from mid-spring through early summer Windflower – also known as
anemone, with daisy like deep pink and white flowers, booms through midsummer Crocus – blooms in early
spring, though there are varieties that bloom through autumn Hyacinth – Tall clusters of
blossoms that are stunning in arrangements. Pink, blue, purple and white, they
grow up to 12 inches tall. Bloom in early to mid-summer from fall planting. Grape Hyacinth- Purple flowers
that bloom in autumn and remain green throughout the winter—although it’s
dormant in the summer. Early in the spring, you can
start planting gladiolus. These huge, showy blooms are a mainstay of cut
flower arrangements, and come in just about every color imaginable. Gladiolus
bulbs can be planted as early as two weeks before the last frost. If you
plant a new set of gladiolus every two weeks, you’ll have cut flowers from
early summer all the way through the first frost. Roses are an entire subject of
their own, but they deserve special mention when discussing cut flower
gardens. Rambling and climbing varieties of roses are especially suited to cut
flower gardens, putting out masses of blooms and responding to cutting with
even more flowers. Trail a rambling rose along a wooden fence rail and you’ll
have sweet-smelling roses for your bedroom dresser all summer long. Also in early spring, you can plant
your annuals. Snapdragons, cosmos and zinnias all bloom at different times
during the summer, which will extend your ‘bouquet season’ into the fall. Don’t forget to include
‘filler’ flowers in your cut flower garden. Foliage grasses and flowers like
alyssum, baby’s breath, and Queen Anne’s Lace can fill spaces in your
bouquets and add a lacy, delicate touch to a vase full of flowers. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright
by Terry Lowery This article courtesy of http://www.about-flowers.com |
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