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A natural approach works well for daffodils in particular and other plants like crocuses and fritillaries. The easiest way to achieve a natural look is simply to lightly toss the bulbs throughout the location in the garden where you want them to grow, then plant them where they fall. They’ll spread over the years.
Crocus (Crocus) USDA zones: 7 to 9 (find your zone) Bloom period: February to April; there are also fall- and winter-blooming crocuses Height: 3 to 6 inches How to plant: 2 to 3 inches deep and 3 to 4 inches apart Light requirement: Full sun; light shade where summers are hot Water requirement: Regular water while growing and blooming; reduce as foliage yellows
Snowdrop Galanthus One of the earliest harbingers of spring, the delicate-looking snowdrop is tough enough to poke through snow in Northern gardens and to bloom through winter in the South. Snowdrop makes a graceful addition to meadows, beds and borders. If you have snowdrop blooms to spare in spring, consider digging up the flowering bulbs with soil intact to transfer to an indoor container. (The flowers likely won't last as long as they would outdoors, but you will get to enjoy them frequently.)
Resurrection Lily, Naked Lady Lily, Surprise Lily Lycoris squamigera
Botanical Tulips Species tulips Often overshadowed by their taller cousins, species tulips are nevertheless much longer lived. In fact, while hybrid tulips tend to fizzle after a year or two, these wildflower variants frequently multiply if their foliage is allowed to die back naturally. Species tulips add bold color to rock gardens and informal borders. Standouts include cultivars of Tulipa batalinii, such as the yellow 'Bright Gem' (pictured here) and 'Yellow Jewel'. Good choices for naturalizing include T. clusiana and the fragrant T. sylvestris.
Crown Imperial Fritillaria imperallis
Allium - There are many notable favorite ornamental onions, including 'Globemaster' (pictured here) with its huge purple spheres on 3- to 4-foot stems
Botanical name: Coreopsis verticillata 'Zagreb' Common name: Zagreb tickseed Where it will grow: Hardy to -40 degrees Fahrenheit (zones 3 to 9) Water requirement: Low Light requirement: Full sun Mature size: 2 feet tall and wide Seasonal interest: Spring through fall When to plant: Plant it in well-drained soil in spring or fall.
fleurs en pot
Botanical name: Stipa tenuissima Common name: Mexican feather grass Where it will grow: Hardy to -10 degrees Fahrenheit (zones 6 to 10); avoid planting where it is invasive. Water requirement: Low Light requirement: Full sun Mature size: 18 to 36 inches tall and wide Seasonal interest: Year-round When to plant: Plant it in well-drained soil in spring.
This is definitely a shrub to include in your garden for three seasons of interest. Botanical name: Double Play Big Bang Spiraea 'Tracy' Common name: Double Play Big Bang spirea Where it will grow: Hardy to -30 degrees Fahrenheit (zones 4 to 9) Water requirement: Low once established Light requirement: Full sun Mature size: 3 feet tall and wide Seasonal interest: Spring through fall When to plant: Plant it in well-drained soil in spring or fall.
Botanical name: Foeniculum vulgare ‘Purpureum’ Common name: Bronze fennel Where it will grow: Hardy to -30 degrees Fahrenheit (zones 4 to 9). In zone 3 it can be enjoyed as an annual without fear of the seeds’ overwintering Water requirement: Low Light requirement: Full sun Mature size: 6 feet tall and wide Seasonal interest: Spring through fall When to plant: Plant it in well-drained soil in spring. Caution: Bronze fennel can self-seed and become a nuisance
Feelin' Blue deodar cedar is a standout in the garden with its low, wide-spreading habit and gorgeous blue tones. This evergreen conifer is completely low maintenance and deer resistant, and has also been drought tolerant in my garden.
Botanical name: Acer griseum Common name: Paperbark maple Where it will grow: Hardy to -30 degrees Fahrenheit (zones 4 to 8) Water requirement: Low once established Light requirement: Full sun or partial shade Mature size: 18 feet tall and up to 15 feet wide Seasonal interest: Year-round When to plant: Plant it in well-drained soil in spring or fall
Le jardinet SaveEmail In fall the leaves of the paperbark maple change from green to shades of coral, peach and caramel — a wonderful highlight of any autumnal display.
The paperbark maple is a more modest-size, slow-growing deciduous tree, prized not only for its beautiful foliage but also for its attractive peeling cinnamon-colored bark
http://www.houzz.com/ideabooks/19059425/list/8-perennials-for-great-fall-color + http://www.houzz.com/ideabooks/18071623/list/great-garden-combo-a-fall-landscape-scene-that-lasts
There are many more flowering perennials out there with awesome fall color, plants such as the ground cover Prairie Smoke (Geum triflorum), which puts on bright reds; geraniums in rainbows of crayon box colors; balloon flowers that get as yellow as phone books; even Joe Pye Weed, ironweed and asters will keep on gifting color late into the year after they've gone to seed
wild senna for many reasons. Senna hebecarpa
Liatris ligulistylis
I'm a big milkweed advocate,
Sedum is a great fall color perennial, and the cultivar 'Autumn Joy' has reliable golden hues.
Take, for example, Hubricht's bluestar (Amsonia hubrichtii, USDA zones 4 to 9), which when massed produces a cloud of bright yellow, then orange, then finally a rusty brown before defoliating. It is about 3 feet tall and wide, prefers full sun and medium to dry soil, and has bright blue flowers in late spring.
Hydrangea
Joe Pye Weed (Eupatorium purpureum)
Following are lots of perennials and grasses with seed heads that can highlight the autumn and winter garden.
Mix it up in your landscape when designing for seed heads. Use some darker-colored plants in front or among grasses and let taller plants shoot up their varied umbels and stalks in both formal groups and informal, scattered wildness. Let those plants mingle in summer, and the autumn and winter show will be even more dramatic. Plant tightly and plant a lot.
Round-headed bush clover (Lespedeza capitata)
Virginia mountain mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum)
Little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)
stiff goldenrod (Solidago rigida
Tall Coreopsis (Coreopsis tripteris
Great coneflower (Rudbeckia maxima) shoots up tall, yellow flowers that leave behind stupendous conical seed heads
At 4 to 6 feet tall, ironweed (Vernonia fasciculata)
Liatris species, like this L. pycnostachya.
Benjamin Vogt / Monarch Gardens SaveEmail Purple prairie clover (Dalea purpurea)
Here we have a nice combo of blue grama grass (Bouteloua gracilis) seed heads paired with Mexican hat coneflower (Ratibida columnifera).
Grey Owl juniper (Juniperus virginiana ‘Grey Owl’, zones 2 to 9 Angelica blue (J. chinensis Angelica Blue) is a similar variety.
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