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Featured Flowers Articles

Flower Photography - A Mild Obsession #1
What does one need to do to get the perfect close-up of a wild flower? Set up a tripod, clip on camera, then snap, snap it's in the bag, camera, chip.. whatever? Maybe... but consider a few unexpected impediments first. Finding the ...

Orchid Care: How to Have Orchids in Flower By Christmas
Fall Weather Can Help Your Orchids To Flower! Orchids bloom most profusely in the fall through winter months. Now is the perfect time to prepare your mature healthy plants to bloom, but you only have a few weeks! What's the secret? Most ...

Planting Blue Flowers In Your Garden
Blue garden flowers can add a splash of unique color to your yard. You can buy blue and blue purple perennials and annuals to enhance your garden design. Plant them in a section for all blue flowers or mix them in with your other colors ...




Enjoy Life With Your Own Flower Garden - Beautiful, Easy!
 

In our hurried, stressful world, we're often looking for ways to relax and enjoy the things around us. Your own flower garden is a terrific way to do that. As the saying goes, you can improve life simply by stopping to smell the roses.

And those roses smell even better if you grew them yourself!

You've probably noticed that some people just have a knack for growing nice, healthy flowers while the rest of us seem to mostly grow weeds. Often the difference between a lush, wonderful flower garden and a gnarly weed bed are a few simple factors. Do the right things and you'll find growing beautiful flowers is easier than you imagined.

1. Plant flowers that do well in your area. Temperature, rainfall, and more that determine your local climate will favor some flowers, while making others almost impossible to grow. For example, if you endure the super hot summers of Texas or Arizona, you will have to grow different kinds of flowers than people in cooler New York or Utah.

To some degree, you can check the backs of seed packets to know which plants grow in your area and what time of year to plant. Gardening guides can also help. Your best bet is often to talk to someone who knows plants. Usually you can find these people working in smaller stores, greenhouses, and nurseries. It's usually not hard to identify who these plant experts are, as just about everybody in town knows about them and repeats their advice.

2. Pay attention to the quality of the soil you're planting in. Often adding richer potting soil or light fertilizer can give your flowers a much better chance of turning out healthy. The right soil is one of the major reasons why some people grow terrific flowers while others can't get anything to

sprout.

3. Buy good quality seeds. Before we started our seed business we were surprised by how expensive flower seeds were, and by how FEW seeds were included in each packet. You could spend some pretty substantial cash buying seeds for a modest garden.

If you're looking to buy a new brand or type of seed that you haven't purchased in the past, I would recommend inspecting a pack before you fill your shopping cart with them. That way you'll know what you're getting.

Above all, be patient. Nature is an amazing system of interrelated factors. Sometimes we can understand and control all the factors, other times we just have to let nature take her course. Gardeners who understand the process of trial and error and remain persistent usually get the best results.

Also, be sure to include your family in your gardening activities. Planning a flower garden, planting it, then caring for the growing flowers can be a fulfilling, inspirational, and uniting experience for everyone in the family.





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Flowers News

Thorns & Flowers - Arizona Daily Star
A flower to the Pima County Board of Supervisors for agreeing to deploy as many as 10 fixed photo enforcement units and 10 mobile van units around the county. Tickets will be issued when vehicles are caught on camera going more than 10 miles per hour ...

Class teaches how to fight global warming with flowers - News 8 Austin
Delphinium carolinianum ssp. virescens, image courtesy of wildflower.org Here are the hours of operation and visitor information for the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center has already sprung into spring and ...

State of plate - Washington Examiner
None too soon, first lady Laura Bush unveiled President Bush's White House china service on Wednesday. She said the first couple may even get a chance to use it before they move out in under two weeks. The state china service is green, white and gold ...

Winter is a great time to clean up and get ready for spring - Hampton Roads Daily Press
I like to look forward this time of year. With the holidays behind us and the days gradually getting longer, I know spring is only weeks away. Even now, plants show early signs of waking up. When Ken and I recently cleaned up fallen branches and ...

Council likely to OK new homes - Charleston Post & Courier
SUMMERVILLE — Despite a shaky economy that's put the brakes on a once-booming building industry, Town Council is set to approve plans for 930 more new houses. The IDEA Real Estate Group, which has offices in Farmington Hills, Mich., and Charleston ...

County remembers Lynch - Gazette
Suitland High coach Nick Lynch talks to his players after a game in 2007. Lynch died Dec. 31 in a car accident. Players, colleagues and coaching adversaries across Prince George's County have spent the past week trying to process the death of David ...

Maersk question unresolved - Charleston Post & Courier
Nearly three weeks after Maersk Line announced its intentions to depart from the Port of Charleston and the scramble to save its business began, the situation remains static, worrying one state lawmaker. "The longer this thing drags out, the harder ...

Cemetery theft upsets widow - Hawke's Bay Today
Valerie Gifkins will be armed with a camera the next time she visits the cemetery to record clues to find the ``low-lifes' who stole from her husband's grave. The 67-year-old Hastings woman was upset to find the flowers she had laid on the grave on ...

Hampstead woman spins and dyes wool from own flock Hampstead woman ... - Eagle-Tribune
HAMPSTEAD — A passion for knitting, which she learned at her grandmother's knee, led Carolyn Blaszka to spin new connections between her own life and the women of past centuries. Blaszka used to buy yarn at shops. She now knits sweaters from wool ...

Yellowjackets pull off surprise win at PCHS - Parkersburg News & Sentinel
PARKERSBURG - Williamstown experienced a senior moment worth remembering. Wednesday night in a Little Kanawha Conference showdown between No. 6 Williamstown and No. 3 Parkersburg Catholic, the Yellowjacket seniors recorded their first-ever victory ...