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Garden Q & A – Perennial Morning Glories

by Tricia

I received a question from a visitor asking if a perennial variety of purple morning glory exists.

Convolvulus mauritanichus or Ground Morning Glory is a perennial. It’s leaves are gray-green and it has lavender blue flowers. This species of perennial morning glory blooms from June through to November.
Ipomoea acuminata, Blue Dawn, is another form of perennial morning glory. It’s a vigorous grower that would be great for banks or walls. This morning glory has dark green leaves and bright lavender blue flowers.

Lavender blue might be too light a purple shade for the reader who posed the question, However both of these plants are easy to care for perennials.

Feel free to leave me garden or plant related questions. I’d be happy to try to find the answers for you.






Filed Under: In The Garden, Questions and Answers Tagged With: Answers, Blue Dawn, Convolvulus mauritanichus, Ground Morning Glory, In The Garden, Ipomoea acuminata, morning glory, perennial, perennial morning glory, Questions, Questions and Answers

Annual and Perennial Baby’s breath

by Tricia

Baby’s Breath – is it an annual or a perennial? Well the answer is that it’s both. There are annual varieties as well as perennials varieties.

If you live in zone 6 or lower and you’d like to grow baby’s breath in a container it’s probably best to grow the annual variety.

The perennial variety of Baby’s breath must have perfect drainage. It’s has deep brittle roots which will make it difficult to grow in anything but a tub if you weren’t planning on growing it in a garden bed. The perennial variety can be counted on to bloom once during the summer, but if it’s a good season it might rebloom once.

Annual baby’s breath on the other hand will bloom over a much longer season.

I must admit that I haven’t had much luck growing either annual or perennial baby’s breath. My other plants always seem to crowd it out. I think I’ll try to look for the perfect spot to grow perhaps a combination of annual and perennial baby’s breath. That way, if I’m finally successful, I’ll have lots of baby’s breath blooms to use in my flower vases. Well if I ever cut fresh flowers, but that’s another story …

Filed Under: Annuals, Garden Tips, Perennials, Plant Profiles, Recreation Tagged With: annual, Annuals, Babys breath, bloom, bloom time, brittle roots, deep root, Entertainment and Rec, garden bed, Garden Tips, large tub, perennial, Perennials, Plant Profiles, planter, rebloom

Tips on how to learn more about the plants growing in your garden

by Tricia

I often receive questions that ask me to explain in detail how to care for specific perennials. While I am working on having a very large index of care information for specific plants it does take time to create this information.

Now, even though I grew up in a family that gardened, I still found myself somewhat bewildered when I moved into my current home and started a garden of my own. I was growing a number of new plants – perennial and annual that I’d never worked with in the past. I too, had tons of questions.

What did I do in order to brush up on my knowledge?

Well, I went searching on the internet to find information on specific plants and gardening techniques. This was a wonderful method of getting information and my list of gardening related bookmark is huge! Unfortunately I also came across information that contradicted other information that I’d found.

That’s when I began buying gardening books. I bought a few good general gardening books, one or two about perennials and annuals, and a few that discussed gardening in my particular area, or at least in my Country. That was one of the best moves that I could have made. Now I’ve got 10+ very helpful gardening books at hand whenever I need to look something up.

Practice, experimentation, talking to other gardeners, and joining garden forums such as the Garden Web also helped quite a bit.

I observed my plants carefully in the first year on my own, taking notes occasionally as to the various plants bloom time, how often it bloomed, when it first started to grow in the spring and so on. I learned a lot just by observing my plants and caring for them as best I could.

Of course nothing pleased me more than when my mother, visiting from our home town and staying with us for a week or so, remarked as she gazed at our garden, “It’s so nice to know that one of our children inherited my green thumb”. What higher compliment could one gardener give another?

If you are just starting your garden, or still in the process of learning about new plants you might want to pick up one or all of the following books:

Perennials for Dummies by Marcia Tatroe ISBN 0764550306;

Rodale’s Illustrated Encyclopedia of Perennials: 10th Anniversary Revised and Expanded Edition by Ellen Phillips and C. Colston Burrell ISBN: 0875965709;

The Well-Tended Perennial Garden: Planting and Pruning Techniques by Tracy Disabato-Aust, Steven M. Still ISBN: 0881924148.

Enjoy your garden!

Filed Under: Education, Garden Books, Garden Tips, In The Garden, Recreation Tagged With: annual, Education, Entertainment and Rec, forum, garden, Garden Books, Garden Tips, gardener, gardening, gardening books, gardening resources, Illustrated encyclopedia of Perennials, In The Garden, internet search, observation, observe, other gardeners, perennial, Perennials for dummies, plant, resource, The well tended perennial garden, tips

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