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Do You Need Annuals or Perennials for your Garden
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Do I Need Annual or Perennial Plants?
The crocus delights us in early spring as it dares to peek through the
snow and lift its face to the sun. Soon after follow tulips, narcissus,
iris, lilacs… all perennials that welcome spring with vibrant
color and fragrance. Perennial plants bloom at different times during
the growing season and delight you with variety in color and size from
earliest spring to late autumn. However, many perennials like those
mentioned, bloom only for a few short weeks and then disappear from the
landscape until the following year.
Annual plants provide a garden with continuous bloom and color
throughout the summer. The “mission” of an annual is to
produce seed. Seeds sprout, foliage grows, flowers bloom and then the
plant goes to seed. When the annual completes its mission, the entire
plant— flower, foliage, and root system —dies.
Some annuals have a very short life span and depending upon when they
are planted, may reseed and go through two or more growing cycles per
season. Other annual plants grow continuously from spring planting
until the first frost of autumn.
Since annual plants die completely at season end, they need to be
replaced yearly. Depending on the cultivar, annual seeds can be planted
directly into a garden or sprouted indoors for transplanting when
weather conditions and soil temperatures are right for growth.
Annual transplants are also available each spring at gardening centers
and many are sold in inexpensive flats that contain four or more
plants. Annual plants can often be closely grouped to fill in barren
areas of your landscape whereas perennials often need space to multiply
and/or to grow to maturity.
Although some perennial plants are more expensive to purchase than
annuals, in the long run you may find them less expensive since they
last for longer than a single growing season. You can also purchase
groups of assorted perennial bulbs in very inexpensive packs.
Perennial foliage and flowers also die at the end of a growing season,
but contrary to annuals, the root systems of perennial plants live over
winter and resprout with new growth each spring.
Another advantage of perennial plants is that although flowers and
foliage die back, the branches of perennial shrubs offer some visual
appeal to a winter landscape.
Perennial plants may take more than one season to reach full maturity.
Because perennials propagate from root structures, many types of
perennials also need to be divided after three or four seasons to
reduce crowding and maintain their vigor.
Although all perennial plants are able to resprout for multiple
seasons, perennials are divided into to categories of hardy perennials
or tender perennials according to the temperature zone in which they
are grown.
Hardy perennials are those that can be left in the ground to return the
following season. Except for occasional division and/or pruning, hardy
perennial plants need little care once established.
Bulbs like tulips and daffodils are among the easiest plants to grow
and excellent choices for a beginning gardener. Tender perennials need
your help to survive the winter. Some can over winter when covered with
a layer of mulch or otherwise protected from the elements with
gardening appurtenances such as rose cones. Some tender perennials need
to be lifted and stored indoors over winter.
So the question remains, do you need annual plants or perennials? Each
type of plant is ripe with “pros” and short on
“cons” if you love flowers. The best solution is to
experiment by planting some of each to get a summer full of color,
variety, and pure gardening enjoyment!
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