Spring
Flower Gardening
By
Linda
Jenkinson
Spring
is the time when nature and your garden awakes and comes alive after
the long winter. That first spring flower or that first green leave
is the sign that winter in coming to an end and that a new growing
season has arrived.
Spring and Flower gardening is almost synonymous. Spring is
the time to interplant perennials, shrubs, roses and plant or
transplant your annuals.
It’s
time to shape up your soil, loosen the mulch around your plants and
prune your early blooming shrubs. Rake and remove leaves and debris
from your garden. Without a good planting medium your flower garden
will never be at its best.
Perennials
will save you a lot of work in your flower garden. So keep
perennials high on your list. These hardworking beauties eliminate
yearly replanting and will still give you that spring and summer
color that you are longing for. It’s best to choose varieties that
don’t need a lot of staking or frequent division. Notorious sun
lovers are daylilies, sedium,and speedwell. Plants like hosta, fern,
sweet woodruff and columbine feel more at ease in the shadow.
Flower
Bulbs add a splash of color to your spring garden. “Sprinkle”
some crocuses, daffodils, and of course tulips between your flower
beds. Flower bulbs are almost essential in a spring flower garden.
If you haven’t planted them last spring make sure you do so coming
fall.
An
important part of spring gardening is getting on top of the weeds.
Most weeds are fairly easy to control when you start taking them out
from early spring on. At that time they still have a shallow root
system and because they haven’t bloomed yet they haven’t
reproduced either. Taking care of them in spring will pay off big in
summer.
Spring,
its really the growing season, and for a gardener its perhaps the
most beautiful and promising time of the year.
About
the Author: Linda is the leading author of http://www.gardening-guides.com/
and http://www.lawnmower-guide.com/
Source:
http://www.isnare.com
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