There's a wide variety of perennials that flower in late summer, with some blooming well into autumn. These are all sun-loving, easy-maintenance perennials or reseeding annuals. We've gathered ...
If you want easy-to-grow and prolific-blooming plants that can provide pops of color all summer long ... trimming a small amount of leggy stems every week or two will keep them looking at their ...
If you want your flowering garden to survive late into fall, then plant some late bloomers that will continue making your ...
Spikes of pink or purple flowers appear for weeks in mid to late summer. Native to the Southwest, this heat-loving deciduous shrub blooms all summer without needing deadheaded. New varieties are ...
With this year’s garden entering the golden months, look to the promise of spring with bulbs to plant this fall. Here are ...
So many perennials, ground covers and annuals reach their peak during the warmer months, leading most amateur gardeners to ...
Plant these flowers ... summer blooms are spent. Fall flowers like pansies and mums are easy to pop into your garden once temperatures begin to drop. Not to mention, many varieties can last all ...
In the summer of 1973 sunflowers appeared ... That's relatively recent in geologic time: If all Earth's history were compressed into an hour, flowering plants would exist for only the last 90 ...
When to Divide Perennial Plants: Generally, fall's the best time to divide perennial plants that bloom in spring and summer ... and some don't need it at all. Do your research before you begin.
Look for flowers to occur during warm months, July through October. A plant can take up to seven years to produce a bloom — that’s how long I’ve had my plant, grown from a small snip.
Transplanting may be the right option if the perennial is crowding out other plants or a sun-loving plant has stretched out into a shady spot Divide spring and summer blooming perennials in the ...