Green Thumb Article Logo
[Valid RSS feed]
Email:    Pass:   
 
Members
   
select
Login
select
Submit Articles
select
Submission Guidelines
select
Benefits
select
Earn Money
   
Publishers
   
select
Benefits for Publishers
select
Terms of Service
select
RSS Feeds
 
Categories

Annuals (24)
Beneficial Insects (9)
Biodynamic Gardening (3)
Biointensive Gardening (2)
Botanical Gardens (4)
Bulbs (corms, tubors, rh (15)
Community Food Bank (1)
Community Gardens (2)
Companion Planting (5)
Composting (11)
Container Gardening (22)
Diaganosing Plant Proble (10)
Edible Flowers (8)
Fall Gardening (19)
Flower Gardens (70)
Fruit Trees (25)
Gardening Books (6)
Gardening for Beginners (94)
Gardening For Profit (10)
Gardening Humor (20)
Gardening Tools (9)
Gardening Zones (6)
Greenhouses (8)
Growing Sprouts (1)
Health and Nutrition (96)
Herb Gardens (61)
Horticulture (47)
Hydroponic Gardening (3)
Indoor Gardening (8)
Landscape Gardening (80)
Mulch (6)
Non-Profit Organizations (4)
Perennials (40)
Permaculture (2)
Pest and Disease (25)
Plant and Tree Identific (5)
Plant Propagation (6)
Prunning (14)
Raised Bed Gardening (3)
School Gardens (8)
Seeds (14)
Soil and Fertilizer Mana (20)
Spring Gardening (13)
Square Foot Gardening (1)
Succulent Plants (3)
Transplanting (1)
Trees and Shrubs (94)
Urban Gardening (1)
Vegetable Gardening (49)
Water Gardening (2)
Water Management (18)
Weed Management (22)
Winter Gardening (6)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 1040
Total Authors: 90
Total Downloads: 145905


Newest Member
bob cashdollar
 
Endorsements
 
Arbico-Organics

Just sow and grow! Part I

   (Read 100+ times)
By Arlene Wright Correll


I was out in the garden today as the temperature was about 61 degrees at 7:30 am and it was a treat after some cold windy March days. I was cleaning up some winter debris and I started to think, it's time to start planning the garden!

There is virtually no one I know who does not love flowers. However, I do know a lot a people who think they have a black thumb. This season, instead of spending a lot of money on potted plants at the nursery, give flowering seeds a try. Even if you've never gardened before in your life, there are seed varieties that need nothing more than a bit of soil and a drink of water to sprout and grow into beautiful plants with flowers that will delight you all summer! Here are 16 sure fire flowers that no one needs a green thumb to grow. (also this garden will go in for under $20.00)

Zinnia (annual seeds, but well worth the sowing each year)
One of the most popular flowers for American gardens, Zinnias are often the first seeds children learn to grow. These are my most favorite annuals. The colors are magnificent. You just can't miss with these sun-loving, quick-growing plants! Give them full sun and don't crowd them too close together, especially if you live in an area where summer nights are humid. They start blooming less than 2 months after the seeds are sown!

Zinnias are "cut-and-come-again" flowers, which means that the more you cut the flowers, the quicker you get new buds. If you want to leave the flowers on the plant, just be sure to deadhead them as soon as they begin to fade. New buds will pop up to take their place!

To sow Zinnia, rake or dig up the top few inches of soil, and plant the seeds a few inches apart, covering lightly with soil and watering in. As the sprouts become crowded, thin them to 6 to 12 inches apart. When they're about 6 inches high, pinch them, and repeat after 2 weeks.
The butterflies will come and visit you and thank you for planting these. They love Zinnia!

Cosmos (annual seeds, but they come back in my garden every year, but never where I originally planted them)
This sun-loving annual prefers dry, poor soil, which is just perfect from our point of view -- less feeding and care to worry about! Its flowers begin just about 2 1/2 months after you sow the seeds and continue for months, bringing butterflies to the garden.

The plants will thrive even in poor dry soils, making them ideal for blazing-hot trouble spots as well as beds, borders, and walkways.

To plant the seeds, just rake or dig up the top few inches of the soil and broadcast (scatter) the seeds. When the sprouts have at least 2 sets of leaves and are beginning to look crowded, thin them to 9 to 12 inches apart.
Sunflower (annual seeds, but some re-seed)

The All-American flower, Sunflower is so easy to grow that you may have seen volunteers springing up beside abandoned barns or in vacant lots in the city. All this seed needs is a good covering of soil (to keep critters from eating it!) and plenty of sunshine and water.

After all danger of frost, sow the entire packet of seeds, spacing them a few inches apart. Then, as the plants sprout, thin them to 3 feet apart. When the young plants are about 4 to 6 inches tall, stake them with any support -- bamboo stakes work well, but a sturdy fence is fine too. Do not give Sunflowers much fertilizer. They thrive in poor soil, and tend to get more leaves but not bigger or better blooms if given lots of food.

The birds will flock to your garden and feast on them later on.

Mexican Sunflower (annual seeds)
If you love the look of Sunflowers but want a much smaller, bushier, more compact plant, I like the Fiesta de Sol! This award-winning plant covers itself with big orange daisies up to 3 inches wide all summer long in the hot sun. Not only is this a butterfly magnet, it is a sun-lover in the blazing-hot garden and enjoy the long summer show!

To grow, just rake or dig the top few inches of soil in the area to be planted. After all danger of frost, set the seeds about 6 to 9 inches apart and cover them with just enough soil to keep the birds away. (The seeds like a little light to help them sprout.) When the sprouts begin to look crowded, thin them to about 15 to 18 inches apart. Before you can turn around you'll be seeing the first of hundreds of blooms!

Linaria (annual seeds, but it reseeds if you leave it alone)
Unromantically known as Toadflax, this is one of the absolute best plants you can grow in the sunny or lightly shaded garden, especially in cool climates. And if you let the last flowers dry right on the plant, they will drop their seeds and bring you many new plants next spring! How's that for a bargain! Loves poor, dry soils, where it happily reseeds itself!

To grow Linaria, rake or dig up the top few inches of soil as soon as it can be worked in spring -- don't wait for the warm weather. Broadcast (scatter) the seeds and, when the young sprouts are a few inches high, thin them to about 6 to 9 inches apart.

Ornamental Millet (annual seeds)
Nothing is easier to grow than this splendid grass, and it's certain to be the focal point of your garden! Plant low-growing flowers in front of these majestic stalks, and your sunny bed or border will look as though it was professionally landscaped! Germination is very quick -- just 3 days! -- and plant growth is rapid and vigorous under good conditions. If you begin seeds indoors, the plants will remain green until set outside, then burnish a lovely violet within several days!

Just about the only mistake you can make with Purple Majesty is sowing the seeds too early. Wait until temperatures remain above 60 degrees, even if that means you're sowing the seeds much later than you intended. This grass will spring up so quickly and beautifully that you'll still have plenty of time to enjoy it! Just set it in full sun and enjoy deep violet color for three seasons every year!

Space the seeds about 6 inches apart, then thin to 10 to 12 inches when the sprouts are about 4 to 5 inches high.
Love-Lies-Bleeding (annual seeds)

This Amaranthus would be worth growing just for its name, but as it turns out, the plants are utterly unique and charming! The long blooms really do "drip" from the plants -- and you can cut and dry them for indoor arrangements that will last all winter!

Sow the seeds after all danger of frost is past, broadcasting (scattering) them or spacing them about 6 inches apart and then thinning them to 12 to 15 inches when the sprouts have several sets of leaves. They will reach 3 to 5 feet tall.

Blanket Flower (perennial seeds)
Blanket Flower is just as All-American and easy to grow as Sunflower, even volunteering in the sandy soil along the coast here in South Carolina! It likes nonstop sun, heat, and dry, poor soil -- which many of us have all too much of in the garden!

Wait until the soil has warmed up this spring to sow the seeds, broadcasting (scattering) them or spacing them just 3 to 4 inches apart. When the plants have several sets of leaves, thin them to about a foot apart.

Arizona Sun is a perennial that will return for many years almost anywhere in the country. And it's the only perennial Blanket Flower that doesn't have to be planted in fall -- you can set the seeds in this spring and have gorgeous blooms the very first year!

Canna (bulbs perennial)
This giant tropical plant is often sold as a plant, but the seeds are easy and quick to grow, and SO much cheaper! Give Canna lots of sun, lots of water (it doesn't mind damp soils), dig up the bulb before first frost, and it will repay you with years and years of bold color! These are hummingbird magnets.

These seeds are very large, and need to be soaked in warm water for 48 hours before planting, in order to soften up the hard seed coat. Plant them vertically in the soil, spacing them 18 inches apart. (This is one seed you don't want to thin!) Feed them very heavily with Algo Flash during the growing season, as well as something like Park's Root and Bloom Boost all spring and summer. Make sure the soil never dries out; Canna loves water! Some of my Cannas get to be 5 ft. or so high.

Continue in Part II

Author Bio Box: Arlene Wright Correll

Author PhotoResources: Excerpted from “Arlene’s Garden Series” by Arlene Wright-Correll
For more gardening or cooking information click http://www.learn-america.com/ and click on Arlene’s Books you can download or buy my gardening & cook books. All my royalties from the sale of my books go to the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and we thank you for your attention to this site.

Article From GreenThumbArticles.com - Organic Gardening Articles
Submitted on: 2008-03-01 08:42:42
Number Times Read: 110
Word Count: 1549
Search by keyword tag ► flowers seeds
Didn't really find what you were looking for?

 
Endorsements
 
Related Articles

HTML Ready Article

Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard to use on your websites, blogs, ezines and newsletters.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual