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Thread: Any Gardeners out there? Flower people?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Windham, Vermont, USA
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    40,861
    If you don't mind buying them each spring, Impatients will be perfect for that spot. Some people also call them Patient Lucies. They thrive in shady spots, and will blossom and keep blossoming all season long. They don't have any scent, but you'll have your choice of bright or dark colors, and the leaves are a nice dark green. They don't have any scent, but on the plus side, they thrive on benign neglect.

    If you want a perennial that will blossom early spring, Forget-Me-Nots are lovely, but unlike Impatients, they have a short season. Violets will blossom every year ...
    I've Been Frosted

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Middle Tennessee, USA
    Posts
    2,693
    I love Gerbera Daisies. They come in a variety of colors. No scent though. Mine did very nice on my back porch without much sunlight last year. I put them in big pots, but my friend had hers in a window box.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Midwest USA
    Posts
    2,615
    Impatiens are a good choice for an annual, although I never found any scent to them myself, but they love shade and fill out quite nicely.

    Vinca Minor (periwinkle) is a nice ivy like plant with purple flowers that likes shade and it's a perinnial.

    I've never had much luck, but Bleeding Heart is supposed to like shade.

    Hosta likes shade, but the flowers are insignificant and don't have a scent.

    I have had daylilies grow on the north side of my house which is also under a huge shade tree all day.

    Either way good luck with your plants this spring.

    RIP Dusty July 2 2007 RIP Sabrina June 16 2011 RIP Jack July 2 2013 RIP Bear July 5 2016 RIP Pooky June 23 2018. RIP Josh July 6 2019 RIP Cami January 6 2022

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Chicago area, Illinois, USA
    Posts
    1,586
    Quote Originally Posted by Karen
    If you don't mind buying them each spring, Impatients will be perfect for that spot. Some people also call them Patient Lucies. They thrive in shady spots, and will blossom and keep blossoming all season long.
    I also plant impatiens every year in my shady areas and put them in pots on the patio. If they are in pots, I find they must be watered every day.

    Also, I started using the potting mix with the fertilizer mixed in so I don't have to worry about it for the rest of the summer.

    I've attached some pictures from previous summers so you can see how cheerful they look. Now I'm really looking forward to getting my garden going.
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    Spoiled child, bad
    Spoiled cat, good

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Belgium, near Ghent
    Posts
    12,946
    I asked my hubby and he recommends Impatiens or Petunia
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petunia

    Good luck!! be sure to post pics of the result
    I miss you enormously Sydney, Maya, Inka & Zazou Be happy there at the Rainbow Bridge

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Rural Eastern Ontario Canada
    Posts
    1,979
    Do you like geraniums? They come in lots of colours and some have lovely scents too. You can take them inside to "winter" and put them back out next spring too.

    Karen, in England we call impatiens "busy lizzies"
    Lilith Cherry
    "
    "Love never claims, it ever gives. Love ever suffers, never resents, never revenges itself." -Mahatma Gandhi

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Where emerald eyes are smiling....
    Posts
    1,612
    I do NOT have a green thumb at all and I seem to kill most flowers. BUT, impatiens/geraniums/hostas are the easiest to grow! Also, check out your local garden nursery and get suggestions there from the informative folks. They will know your zone/weather conditions and can give you the best recommendations.

    My hostas and ferns thrive in my shaded areas of the garden. Here's a list of other suggestions:
    Shade loving plants

    Also, you may want to substitute the planter boxes with container gardening. I noticed that planter boxes dry out often, where a deep pot/container seems to do better for the flowers.

    Good luck! I'm hoping not too kill too many things this year in my garden.
    Don't be afraid that your life will end. Be afraid that it will never begin.

  8. #8
    I'm going to Home Depot today to get some things to work on my upstairs bath, so I'll stop in their greenhouse area and see what they have.

    Is it too early to plant??

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Windham, Vermont, USA
    Posts
    40,861
    Quote Originally Posted by jenn_librarian
    I'm going to Home Depot today to get some things to work on my upstairs bath, so I'll stop in their greenhouse area and see what they have.

    Is it too early to plant??
    It would be up here, but I don't know about your local climate. Ask the folks in the Garden Center. You don't want to plant Impatients until after there's no more danger of frost for the season ... so they may not even be available yet.
    I've Been Frosted

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Russian Blue

    My hostas and ferns thrive in my shaded areas of the garden.

    Also, you may want to substitute the planter boxes with container gardening. I noticed that planter boxes dry out often, where a deep pot/container seems to do better for the flowers.

    Good luck! I'm hoping not too kill too many things this year in my garden.
    Those planters did dry out a lot! That surprised me! That might have been part of the problem, along with the lighting and the fact that I'm not a good waterer if things like that aren't right in front of me, lol. Outta sight, outta mind kind of thing. Guess I'll have to BBQ more this year since my grill is on the back deck, that way I'll see the plants and remind myself a lot more, lol.

    There were hostas here when I moved in. The previous owners had planted them along the white fence of the neighbor's house. I actually Freecycled them, and had someone come and dig them all up. I wanted to put mulch down, or do stonework there. Now it's just mossy, and icky. I didn't have the guy who did my deck do any other landscaping (we were talking about me doing something to save me $$$, and I never got around to getting stone to put down). I'm not one for taking care of a lot of plants and bushes and all that other stuff. I grew up on a 100 acre farm and moved away from there for a reason, lol. I just want some green I have to take care of here and there.

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