I think all
gardeners have a favorite annual; maybe several favorites. Some of the reasons:
There are
those that have the garden discipline to only use annuals that make perfect
pots, borders and arrangements.
A beautiful frilly annual poppy. |
For those
with lots of room, having a “cutting garden” of annuals planted in rows like
vegetables gives a summer’s worth of bouquets.
Combining
certain annual flowers with vegetables may help repel insects.
Adding
bright annuals to a perennial bed keeps it flowering all summer.
Then, there
are those of us who plant flowers that bring back good memories. I like the old fashioned annuals I saw in my
grandma’s gardens. Planted from seed,
they are inexpensive and provide a riot of colors.
Annuals
from seed are easy and probably the reason kids are allowed to help plant them.
Some of my favorites to grow from seed:
Every zinnia I've ever had is my favorite. |
Zinnia is a hardy plant with almost every
color except blue. Short, tall, big,
little, solid or variegated colors and different petal shapes. Include white and green for serene and
elegant. The riot of colors are reds,
gold, orange and all shades in between.
A few Cosmos in a bud vase is especially sweet. |
Cosmos look dainty and are tough as
nails. The soft fern-like leaves fill in
around other plants and the beautiful flat flowers keep coming all season. Shades of pink, white and gold are the most
popular.
Bachelor Buttons fronting an old stump full of petunias. |
Bachelor Button is another deceptively tough plant
and perfect for those needing blue in the gardens. It also comes in shades of pink and
white. They may self seed.
These bright Four-O'Clocks add zing to my veggie garden. |
Four-o’clock is a thick bushy plant in bright
pinks, oranges, yellow, red and white. As their name indicates, they provide a visual
statement in the evening and on cloudy days.
Marigolds are like a scoop of sunshine. |
Marigolds are so tough some folks consider
them too common and overlook the benefits of being drought tolerant. It isn’t bashful about standing it’s ground
against weeds and is virtually disease and insect resistant. Many folks believe they help keep insects off
garden vegetables; at any rate it brightens up a garden, bed, or pot. There are many new hybrids in shades of
gold, maroon, white and yellow. Tall,
short, small or large flowered.
Cleomes are a good insect magnet. |
Cleome is a tall feathery plant that keeps
on giving since the flowers keep blooming on the top. White, pink and wine colors. Gather the seeds before they drop if you
don’t want zillions of plants next spring.
They do pull easily. I generally
let some drop and throw seeds over beds hoping for a mix in with perennials.
All of
these may be seeded in rows, used in pots, put in selected areas or scattered
to form a dense bed. With some
searching, you can find plant sets at
nurseries. The above seeds can be mixed
to form a combo of size and color perfect for a spectacular attraction or to
hide something.
One of about two-hundred zillion colors of Nasturtiums |
The annuals
above (and most others) need full sun, moisture when getting established and
then they are happy with a typical Illinois summer. Keeping weeds pulled insures they have all
the moisture, sun and nutrients available.
Once
they’ve seeded or you’ve harvested the seeds, pull annuals and compost. Annuals are better not left in the ground
over winter because they can harbor diseases and insects plus most are no
longer attractive.
To harvest
the seeds, pick when the flower is dry and lay on newspaper for a few days just
to make sure the seeds are dry. Then put
in a paper envelop, label and store in a dry spot where it won’t freeze.
The old fashioned fragrant Nicotiana |
Enjoy a
riot of annuals throughout summer and bring a little old fashioned love back
into your gardens.
(I know I didn't include some of our favorites, but I had to stop at some point. I agree there are so many to choose from and I didn't even get into annual vines.)
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