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Garden Center Plants - Annuals

A true annual is a plant that completes its life cycle in one year. This means it goes from seed to seed and then dies off, during the course of one growing season. The whole mission of an annual is to produce seed and propagate. That's why deadheading or removing spent flowers before the seed matures, produces more flowers and therefore more potential seed.

Some tender perennials are grown as annuals in colder climates. For a perennial to be worth growing as an annual, it must flower profusely in its first year of growth. Pansies, lantana and alyssum are all actually tender perennials.

There are also plants considered to be hardy annuals. This just means that they are able to withstand a little frost without being killed off and will continue to bloom and set seed into the next year, but they will eventually expire.

Annuals can be further divided into cool season and warm season. Pansies will fade as the summer heats up. Zinnias won't even get moving until the nights stay warm.

Annual flowers give you the opportunity to have a totally different garden every year.

A short list of the more common annuals we grow:


Agastache
Ageratum
Alyssum
Anagallis
Angelonia
Asparagus fern
Bacopa
Begonia dragon lady
Bidens
Celosia
Chenille
Cleome
Coleus
Cuphea
Dahlia
Dianthus
Diascia

Dracaena spike
Dusty miller
Euphorbia
Fiber optic grass
Fuchsia
Gaura
Gazania
Geranium
Heliotrope
Lantana
Lobelia
Marigold
Nemesia
Osteospermum
Pansy
Pentemon
Perilla

Petunia
Plectranthus
Portulaca
Salvia
Scaevola
Sedum
Snap dragon
Streptocarpella
Sweet potato vine
Thunbergia
Torenia wishbone
Verbena
Vinca
Viola
Zinnia


Three tips for growing annuals...

1. Planting and spacing: Plant transplants closely so they fill in quickly. Usually, the tag will say to plant 8 to 12 inches apart, so pick 8 inches for a great show of flowers more quickly. I actually take a ruler into the garden, or measure off the spacing with my trowel. If the plants are a bit pot-bound (roots circling around), cut an X into the bottom with a knife or use your fingers to tease them apart so they make better contact with soil.

2. Watering: Annuals need water to thrive. Water them deeply two to three times a week after planting. The moist soil will encourage good growth. For the best show of color all summer, don't let up on the watering.

3. Feed your plants: Once a week, feed your plants with a balanced all-purpose 20-20-20 fertilizer that you mix with water. You'll find traditional or organic fertilizers - either will do the job. One good organic is fish emulsion, which I like to mix together with a kelp-based fertilizer. Your annuals will grow even better if you mix some compost or manure into your soil before you plant.

begonias
Colorful annuals add so much to your home and garden.


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