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Try these combinations of favorite spring flowers in your next container gardening project.
Container gardening can be enjoyed by anyone, whether you're a city dweller or a country cousin. Many people enjoy container gardening for the simple ease and convenience of planting flower gardens in containers or pots. This spring, enjoy container gardening with a new twist - special color combinations of spring flowers to delight you until early summer. Pansy Container GardensPansies are perhaps the least fussy spring flowers. They tolerate cold well, and continue to bloom until the summertime heat stresses them too much. Pansies make excellent spring container gardening projects. Combine colors from the opposite ends of the color wheel spectrum for maximum impact:
Spring Container Gardening CombinationsWhile temperatures remain cool and the weather stays iffy, choose cold-tolerant flowers.
The list above includes three spring flowers that may surprise you: tulips, daffodils, and hyacinths. While most gardeners know that these are typically planted in the fall as bulbs, they can also be forced by using timed periods of cold followed by planting. Many nurseries and garden centers force spring bulbs, and sell them already growing and blooming in pots. These can be enjoyed as temporary, living flower arrangements indoors, or you can transplant them into container gardening pots with other flowers. Some excellent combinations include:
What You Will Need for a Spring Container GardenTo create your own special spring container garden, assemble the following supplies:
Steps to Create a Spring Container GardenOnce the supplies are assembled, follow these steps to create your own unique spring container gardening project.
Enjoy your new container garden for several weeks or months, weather permitting. Pick off or snip off dead flowers to encourage new ones to form. If you'd like to save the tulip, daffodil or hyacinth bulbs, you can remove the plant once it is finished flowering, and transplant it to the garden. Be sure to baby it and do not snip off the leaves, even if it's finished flower. The plant uses the leaves to store food in the bulb and create next year's flowers. Because many spring flowers prefer cool temperatures, the container garden may start to look drained when the hot weather arrives. Simply move the flowers into the garden to save them for next year, and use your pot for your next container gardening project.
The copyright of the article Spring Container Gardening in Theme Flower Gardens is owned by Jeanne Grunert. Permission to republish Spring Container Gardening in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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