ReportWire

Tag: Flowers

  • Charming Flower Legends & Histories From Around the World – Garden Therapy

    Charming Flower Legends & Histories From Around the World – Garden Therapy

    [ad_1]

    From the flowers carried as a lucky charm to the flowers that became a tourist destination in Arizona, many flowers have a fascinating history. Here are some flower legends that follow some of our most beloved blooms.

    When I’m learning how to identify different flowers and their names, I find it always helps if I know the history behind the flowers. Even just one cool fact makes the name stick!

    Over time, I’ve heard many legends about flowers, and some are just so fascinating. Whether it’s where it got its name, how it was used, or what it represented, many flower legends come from all corners of the world.

    I read A Short History of Flowers: The Stories That Make Our Gardens by Advolly Richmond and absolutely loved the different stories she told about many common flowers you might find in your garden. I wanted to feature some amazing flower legends with the help of Advolly!

    Here are the flower legends we’ll be exploring…

    A Short History of Flowers by Advolly Richmond book coverA Short History of Flowers by Advolly Richmond book cover

    Excerpted with permission from A Short History of Flowers (Frances Lincoln, an imprint of The Quarto Group, 2023) by Advolly Richmond. A Short History of Flowers publishes March 7, 2024, and can be purchased wherever fine books are sold. Learn more at quarto.com.

    California Poppy

    Eschscholzia californica 

    The California poppy is native to the western United States, and as you can guess, is one of the main wildflowers spotted in California. It became California’s state flower in 1903.

    “The plant’s fiery, orange-coloured flowers earned the name ‘copa del ora’, which means ‘cups of gold,’ drawing on the legend that the orange gold petals of the Eschscholzia californica filled the soil with the same precious metal,” says Advolly. “No one could have anticipated just how prophetic this would be when the California Gold Rush came in the 1850s.”

    The First Nations peoples of California valued the plant for its medicinal purposes, using it to reduce headaches, as a natural antidepressant, as a sleep aid, to reduce stress, and more.

    In most recent history, Meghan Markle as Duchess of Sussex included the California poppy in her new coat of arms after marrying Prince Harry, honouring her heritage and birthplace.

    California poppy flower legendsCalifornia poppy flower legends

    Daylily

    Hemerocallis spp.

    When I’m walking through the streets of Vancouver, you can’t go a few houses without seeing the brilliant blooms of daylilies in the summer.

    “Daylilies were known to the early Roman, Greek, and Egyptian doctors from plants brought from China along the silk routes about 2,000 years ago. Northern Europe only learned of them in the sixteenth centre, with Hemerocallis fulva introduced in 1576,” says Advolly.

    Where daylilies originated, no one is quite sure. The theory is that the plant began as a chance seedling that then became cultivated. In China, the flower legend was that eating the blooms could alleviate sorrow.

    I myself love daylilies as an edible ornamental. The root tubers can be cooked like you would a potato and the flowers can be eaten in a salad or to garnish a dessert.

    daylily flower legenddaylily flower legend

    English Lavender

    Lavandula angustifolia

    There are few people who don’t love the calming scent of lavender. As a known medicinal herb and aromatherapy staple, lavender is used to scent many home and beauty products and as a decorative element itself when dried.

    Lavender has been a European garden staple since the medieval period, used to clean laundry and as an insect repellent.

    “When Queen Victoria declared her love of lavender, it incited a cult-like reaction which drove the fashion for all-things lavender, leading to the rapid growth of the English lavender industry,” says Advolly.

    To this day, I think the lavender craze still remains strong. The plant is a foundation for many of my own recipes, including lavender linen water and lavender bath salts.

    Find all my lavender projects in this post.

    field of English lavenderfield of English lavender

    Lilac

    Syringa vulgaris

    Speaking of beautiful scents, we can’t forget the lilac. While traditionally a spring bloom, the rising popularity of lilacs led to the French forcing blooms.

    The art of forcing lilac blooms commercially, especially for the white version, had been practised in France as early as 1774 in caves and cellars,” says Advolly. “Because, remarkably, no matter the natural shade of the flower, when non-white lilacs are forced in the dark, they produce white flowers.”

    Today, we can grow white lilacs, but the common purple lilac remains the most popular. They live for decades, often outliving the gardeners who planted them. I inherited my own lilac tree when I bought my first home, and I happily brought cuttings indoors to perfume the whole house.

    pink lilac flowers with white borderpink lilac flowers with white border

    Lily of the Valley

    Convallaria majalis

    Longly beloved, the lily of the valley was one of the first flowers to be grown in cultivated gardens. It’s highly beloved in France, where it has its own festival on May 1, ever since King Charles IX became enamoured with the spring bloom.

    On this day, families will wake up early and head into the woods to forage for the flowers and bring them to friends and family to symbolize good fortune.

    But the king isn’t the only famous Frenchman to be captivated by the lily of the valley.

    Christian Dior often wore the flower in his buttonhole just as his models sported outlandish boutonnieres on the catwalk,” says Advolly. “In order to ensure that he had a constant supply of the flower, Dior’s personal florist, Madame Paule Dedeban, grew it all year round in a heated glasshouse so that the designer was never without his spring bloom.”

    lily of the valleylily of the valley

    Love-in-a-Mist

    Nigella damascena

    A signature cottage-style flower, the love-in-a-mist has jewel-like flowers that sit atop feathery, fennel-like leaves. Once the flower is gone, a pretty seed pod takes its place, making it a highly decorative flower.

    It was a common garden flower in Europe by the 16th century, even once considered too common and not worth growing by some. But one of the most popular varieties, ‘Miss Jekyll’, was bred by Miss Gertrude Jekyll in the 1800s in her own cottage garden after years of careful selection.

    While you might expect the flower to represent love, its name actually comes from the appearance of the flowers floating atop fine foliage.

    “Unrequited love and longing also found meaning in the unusual flower – giving someone a bouquet of N. damascena meant ‘you puzzle me’ but it could also indicate doubt, uncertainty, and even embarrassment,” says Advolly.

    Nigella growing in front of lavenderNigella growing in front of lavender

    Snapdragon

    Antirrhinum majus

    Snapdragons are such a unique flower, and I’m sure I’m not alone in squeezing the flower to make the ‘dragon’s jaws’ open and close. The ‘flames’ of colour and a stamen tongue might even poke out.

    And if you’ve ever let your snapdragons go to seed, you’ll see that their dried pods resemble tiny skulls. Because of this, snapdragons were thought to offer protection from witchcraft and even again.

    Their appearance alone could bring all kinds of flower legends. “At the height of the Renaissance, new powers were bestowed upon the humble snapdragon,” says Advolly. “If you ever found yourself short on charm, it was believed wearing the flower about your person could miraculously enhance your social standing, as the flowers were said to give you charisma.”

    Well, who can say no to a little charisma!?

    flower legends: snapdragonsflower legends: snapdragons

    Snowdrops

    Galanthus nivalis

    Before the tulips spring, you can find snowdrops. They truly are one of the first hallmarks of spring, albeit a subtle flower that might get missed upon a first look. Snowdrops will naturalize and form a colony, so they can linger for many years after originally being planted.

    “Colonies of snowdrops are often found naturalised in many parts of the country at this time of year and, in most cases, in the vicinity of the ruins of ancient monasteries, churchyards, and other religious establishments, relics of past pious spring traditions,” says Advolly.

    Snowdrops are used during the Christian festival Candlemas, where candles (and snowdrops for their resemblance to a candle’s flame) celebrate Mary’s purification in the Temple of Jerusalem.

    The flower has also been linked to death due to its appearance and being found commonly in graveyards. Their white petals resemble a corpse’s shroud and the drooping heads like sombre mourners.

    Snowdrops with yellow crocus in the backgroundSnowdrops with yellow crocus in the background

    Sweet Pea

    Lathyrus odoratus

    Sweet peas are another cottage garden favourite, where the multi-coloured butterfly flowers climb atop fences and trellises. And, of course, cut and brought inside, where their smell fills the room.

    In the 1800s, the popularity for the flower rose in Europe and by the late 1800s, desire for the flower had spread to America too.

    Davis describes one family, the Nakagawa family, as well as a group of other Japanese-American families who sought to establish new farms in Arizona after they were incarcerated during WWII. The Nakagawa’s flower farm grew many flowers, including sweet peas.

    “In early summer, visitors travelled across states to buy bouquets from the flower stands or just to drive past the field,” says Advolly. “The scent was said to carry for miles, and drivers would roll down their windows to make the most of the beautiful scent as they drove by mile after mile.”

    The flower farms belonging to these Japanese families were a highly sought-after destination. The farms no longer exist today, the land being sold to developers over time. But how I wish I could have paid a visit!

    Zinnia

    Zinnia elegans

    In comparison to other flowers on this list, it took a while for zinnias to rise to the ranks of a must-have garden flower. By the Victorian age, they were all the rage, and the breeding and cultivation of the plant took off.

    Clementine Hunter was a folk artist who found plenty of inspiration in zinnias. Born on a cotton plantation in Louisiana, Hunter picked cotton before becoming a domestic servant at Melrose Plantation, a liberal retreat for artists.

    “In 1939, at the age of fifty-two, while cleaning a recently vacated guest room, she came across discarded tubes of paints and brushes left by a visiting artist,” says Advolly. “Hunter, who never learnt to read or write, began to paint. One of her first paintings in that year was on a piece of curated cardboard and titled Bown of Zinnias, a favourite subject that she constantly returned to over the years.”

    Little did she know that one of her zinnia paintings would go on to be displayed at the Louvre. And like Clementine, many of us continue to be infatuated with the zinnia flower.

    red zinnia flowersred zinnia flowers

    And those are just a handful of some flower legends and amazing histories. For more, be sure to check out Advolly’s book A Short History of Flowers. If you know an interesting story behind a flower, leave it in the comments below.

    More Fun Gardening Folklore

    Pin image for the history and legends of flowersPin image for the history and legends of flowers

    [ad_2]

    Stephanie Rose

    Source link

  • Now that the Philadelphia Flower Show has ended, here are six spots to keep getting your a floral fix

    Now that the Philadelphia Flower Show has ended, here are six spots to keep getting your a floral fix

    [ad_1]

    Every year, the Philadelphia Flower Show seems to expire as quickly as a cheap bouquet in a discount vase after Valentine’s Day. 

    But the closing of the 195th installment of the massive horticultural event doesn’t mean an end of your opportunities to be one with nature. There are plenty of gardens, arboretums and greenhouses in the region to visit and celebrate the arrival of spring.


    RELATED: New book explores how gardners in the region have transformed outdoor spaces


    If you’re still looking to get a floral fix, here are six botanic gems in the Philly area. 

    Tyler ArboretumJeff Tomik/PhillyVoice

    Tyler Arboretum features multiple treehouses.

    Tyler Arboretum

    With 17 miles of trails through woodlands and meadows, fragrant and edible gardens, a butterfly house, a StoryWalk (pages from a children’s book placed along a path) and a gnome scavenger hunt, Tyler Arboretum is acres of adventures.

    LOCATION: 515 Painter Road, Media, Delaware County

    FEE: $10-$18 for general admission; $65-$300 for annual membership

    BEST TIME TO GO: May 3-5 for the annual plant sale. The fundraising event, which includes a members-only day on Friday, has experts available to offer gardening advice and a wide range of flowers and plants for sale.

    PHOTO OP: In 2008, artists and architects designed Totally Terrific Treehouses for an exhibit and a few wacky structures remain – including the Crooked Goblin Shack, Thoreau’s Cabin, Strummin’ and Drummin’, and Fort Tyler.

    Morris ArboretumMorris ArboretumCourtesy of/Morris Arboretum

    Morris Arboretum features gardens, sculptures and fountains.

    Morris Arboretum & Gardens

    Strolling through the 92-acre, 19th century Victorian arboretum is a walk through history. The grounds include a 100-year-old rose garden, an English Park fountain that dates back to 1916 and a six-foot wall made from Wissahickon schist filled with perennials that was built in 1924.

    LOCATION: 100 E. Northwestern Ave., Philadelphia

    FEE: $12-$20 for adults depending on the season, with discounted tickets and memberships available

    BEST TIME TO GO: A warm spring day is the perfect time to sign up for a guided tour of Morris Arboretum or explore the 1.4-mile loop trail on your own, taking in the old trees and unusual plants from around the world. With all the gardens, sculptures and fountains, there’s something to see at every turn. During the holiday season, Morris builds a model train railway with thousands of lights on a third of a mile of tracks.

    PHOTO OP: The white marble Love Temple on Swan Pond, an artificial lake that was made in 1905, is a fan favorite to snap pics, but just be warned that you might get photo bombed by Flora and Fauna, the swan sisters who call the pond home.

    thumbnail_IMG_3774.jpgthumbnail_IMG_3774.jpgJeff Tomik/PhillyVoice

    Ott’s Exotic Plants in Schwenksville has a greenhouse with an indoor waterfall and koi pond.

    Ott’s Exotic Plants

    Whether you’re looking to take a picture by the indoor two-story waterfall and koi pond, buy a massive fruit tree or start a succulent garden, Ott’s Exotic Plants is the perfect place for any gardening enthusiast — or anyone trying to find a spot for a cheap date.

    LOCATION: 861 Gravel Pike, Schwenksville, Montgomery County

    FEE: Free

    BEST TIME TO GO: In autumn for “Mum Mountain.” In the 1960s, dirt excavated to build Ott’s parking lot was used to form a 40-foot hill behind the greenhouse. To avoid it looking like an eyesore, Ott’s owners began covering it entirely with chrysanthemums every fall, and the pile of dirt quickly transformed into a tourist attraction along Route 29. The only thing that cuts through the splashes of autumn colors are rocks that frame a cave-like underground tunnel and a meandering path to the top of the hill.

    PHOTO OP: Climbing the few stairs to Mum Mountain’s “peak” provides you with a bird’s-eye view of the store’s whimsical cottage-like stone structure and its multicolored slate roof. 

    A Longwood Christmas at Longwood GardensA Longwood Christmas at Longwood GardensJeff Douglass/PhillyVoice

    Longwood Gardens’ annual Christmas display, including here in 2019, draws huge crowds.

    Longwood Gardens

    Pierre S. du Pont purchased the land in 1906 to preserve trees on the farm, and in 1921 the entrepreneur opened the 1,100-acre estate to the public. Now more than 1.5 million people (about the population of Philadelphia) every year come to see the gardens, fountains, woodlands and meadows on the vast grounds.

    LOCATION: 1001 Longwood Road, Kennett Square, Chester County

    FEE: $25 for adults

    BEST TIME TO GO: The holiday season draws huge crowds to Longwood Gardens – and it’s totally worth fighting through the masses to see each year’s new theme. About a third of Longwood Gardens’ annual visitors come for the decorations, trees and lights of its elaborate Christmas display.

    PHOTO OP: Longwood is endlessly instagrammable, but the challenge is all the people. The best spot to capture Longwood Gardens’ beauty – and not its crowds – is the main fountain. With 1,719 jets, including some the shoot water as high as 175 feet, it provides plenty of opportunities to take a picture that makes it seem like you’re in a secluded enchanted garden.

    Awbury Cope houseAwbury Cope houseSource/Awbury Arboretum

    The Francis Cope House at Awbury Arboretum was built in 1854.

    Awbury Arboretum

    The Germantown estate was formerly home to a wealthy Quaker family and has been open to the public for more than 100 years. The Victorian-style Francis Cope House, built in 1861 out of Wissahickon schist, is the epicenter of the grounds, which feature gardens, meadows, ponds, streams and wetlands. The Awbury Arboretum is across Washington Lane station on SEPTA’s Chestnut Hill East Line, so it’s easily accessible by public transit. 

    LOCATION: 1 Awbury Road, Philadelphia

    FEE: Free

    BEST TIME TO GO: On a late spring day, magnolias, tulip trees, orange-leaf hydrangeas and many more of Awbury’s blossoming beauties can be enjoyed in full bloom on a walk through Haines Field.

    PHOTO OP: The wildflower meadow offers a backdrop of bright colors and an opportunity to catch a glimpse of the many feathered friends on the grounds.

    Chanticleer Garden

    The 48-acre botanical garden that’s built on the Rosengarten estate dates back to the early 20th century. The grounds, which are closed to the public during winter, will be open Wednesdays to Sundays from March 27 through Nov. 3. Seven horticulturists are each responsible for the design, planting and maintenance of an area, which can feature perennials and seasonal, tropical and subtropical plants.

    LOCATION: 786 Church Road, Wayne, Chester County

    FEE: $15 (13 and older)

    BEST TIME TO GO: During the summer on Friday nights, guests to Chanticleer Garden are welcome to bring food and drinks and have picnics at the estate.  

    PHOTO OPThe Teacup Garden has a Mediterranean look, with olive trees that frame a fountain and white flowers of clary sage.

    [ad_2]

    Jeff Tomik

    Source link

  • What Happens if My Plant Has Early Blooms? – Garden Therapy

    What Happens if My Plant Has Early Blooms? – Garden Therapy

    [ad_1]

    From cherry blossoms in December to spring bulbs in January, I’ve seen some flowers bloom exceptionally early. If you’ve also seen some early blooms, you might be worried about how this will affect your plant when it inevitably gets cold again. Here’s what you need to know about early blooming flowers.

    It’s been a weird winter here in Vancouver. For a while, we had a very, very, cold snap. Then quickly, it warmed up and turned bright and sunny…only to get cold again.

    I saw cherry blossoms in December—which doesn’t usually happen until late February.

    I’m confused. The plants are confused. We’re all confused.

    All across the world, we have been seeing extremes. So it’s no wonder I’ve been seeing lots of questions from gardeners about what will happen to their plants if they see early blooms.

    If you’re concerned about early blooming flowers, join me as we look at the plant’s life cycle and what will happen to your plants should they sprout a wee bit early.

    Why Are Plants Blooming Earlier?

    It’s getting harder and harder for some (I won’t name names) to deny that the climate is changing. We will see very unusual things happening with the weather, and the plants will respond to it.

    Some areas are seeing more prolonged periods of drought, while others have heavy rainfall. We may have a cold, severe winter, but they’re getting less frequent as these mild winters creep up on us.

    Because of these temperatures, we’re seeing longer growing periods with an earlier last frost date and a later first frost date. In the US, the growing season has increased by more than two weeks compared to the beginning of the 20th century in 48 states. In the UK, flowers bloom an average of 26 days earlier than in the 1980s.

    The plants are getting the message loud and clear. They’re responding to the climate the best way they know how, one of which is early blooms.

    As the climate changes, the plants are also changing. Anything that’s a perennial, like trees, shrubs, perennials, and bulbs, will continue to evolve. The strongest plants will be the ones to survive this.

    The next generation of plants will create their future. The plants will become hardier in these conditions as the climate changes. The weaker ones may not make it, but the stronger ones do.

    apple blossoms are early blooming flowersapple blossoms are early blooming flowers
    Apple trees are one of the first trees to blossom in the spring.

    A Plant’s Life Cycle

    It’s always important to consider the plant’s life cycle, like what we do in pruning. Most plants go dormant in the winter by dropping leaves, stopping flowering, and devoting their energy to the root system.

    That goes for most plants, like perennials, trees, bulbs, and even our edible vegetable plants.

    When shoots come up early, remember that very little of the overall plant energy is above the soil line.

    If it cools down again and there’s damage to the plant, most of it is still safe under the soil. There may be some damage to the above plant material, but the rest should be fine.

    There may be some gnarly leaves and fewer flowers. She may not be looking her best. But know that she’s looking beautiful beneath the soil and will survive just fine.

    Place your trust in the plants. Observe, but try not to worry. You can’t do much—it’s in the plant’s hands!

    What Happens to Perennials Blooming Early?

    Perennials can pop up early when they see the cues of spring. But once it freezes again, the plant’s energy will retreat to the root system.

    The plant isn’t fully developed above the soil, but it can still withstand some damage to the upper part of the plant. It’s rare that any of that damage will go down to the root.

    Soil is very insulating and will help maintain a temperature the plant is hardy to. If you planted it in the right space, that is.

    rhododendron bud in snowrhododendron bud in snow
    Snow on top of rhododendron leaves and buds.

    Early Blooming Flowers on Trees

    Generally, the leaf buds will be okay on trees. Trees send out many leaf buds early in the season when it’s cold. If they lose some, the tree will be okay.

    Flower buds, however, tend not to bounce back as easily.

    This year, we had cherry blossoms blooming exceptionally early in Vancouver due to a mild winter. I anticipate that they aren’t going to flower as prolifically this spring. Since they tried to flower early, they likely won’t set out a second flowering.

    cherry blossoms are early bloomscherry blossoms are early blooms
    Cherry blossom trees in Vancouver.

    Early Blooms from Flower Bulbs

    Bulbs are very used to this seesaw of warm and cold temperatures. Bulbs store all their energy under the soil. Within the bulb, there is enough energy for the plants to grow before there’s much spring sun.

    The shoots will begin to pop up when it feels right. Generally, most bulbs don’t mind the cold. Some, like snowdrops and crocuses, even thrive in the snow. Bulbs have very strong root systems that help them bounce back in cold conditions.

    The shoots may die off when it gets cooler again. But that’s fine. In the end, you could end up with fewer bulbs that are less robust and not as strong. This is more likely if there is a late freeze and most of the plant has already sprung up.

    Crocus Blooming in Sedum as early blooming flowersCrocus Blooming in Sedum as early blooming flowers
    Crocus bulbs thrive in cooler temperatures.

    Dealing With Vegetable Plants That Freeze

    Some vegetables don’t mind cool temperatures. Imagine you didn’t cover your Swiss chard or kale, and it froze so much that it wilted and died back instead of getting sweeter (which we all hope will happen).

    Those vegetables tend to grow back again. They might not grow back as much as before, but anything under the soil will be okay.

    So your root vegetables, like parsnips, beets, or carrots, will be doing great underneath the soil, even if the cold damages the leaves above the soil.

    Swiss Chard Garden MarkerSwiss Chard Garden Marker
    Swiss chard is quite hardy compared to other vegetables.

    FAQ About Handling Early Blooms

    What happens if my garlic blooms early in the fall?

    We plant garlic in the fall (I always do so around Halloween). Sometimes, you can plant it a little too early or have a warmer-than-usual fall, and the garlic will send up shoots in the fall.

    When it freezes, the garlic will die back. But don’t worry; the garlic will start the whole process again in the spring.  

    You can even plant garlic with shoots growing on it, like when you buy them a little late. This won’t affect your garlic overall.

    Yes, there is a gold standard when it comes to garlic. Garlic growers won’t want shoots affected by the freeze or provide any stress to the plant as that can affect the overall robustness of the plant.

    But will you still get garlic? Absolutely.

    What happens if it’s a late freeze?

    Let’s say it’s late spring and starting to get to summer, and we suddenly have an unexpected freeze. In this case, the plant’s chance of survival would drop.

    At this point, most of the energy the plant is expelling is now on the upper part of the plant and not beneath the soil where it is protected.

    Most perennials will bounce back, but the damage may be more significant if they are further down in their seasonal growth.  

    How are bees affected by earlier flowering plants?

    Rising temperatures and earlier springs will mean that bees will wake up earlier. It’s estimated that they wake up five days earlier than twenty years ago.

    With more species blooming at the same time than in the past, there isn’t such a continuous, even supply of flowers for the bees. This mismatch between when the flowers and bees are active could threaten the bees looking for food sources.

    This will also reduce plant pollination and their ability to reproduce and yield crops. Rising temperatures may also mean the bees come out earlier, but they need their timing to align with the flowers to avoid being affected.

    Why do some plants bloom earlier than others?

    Each plant (or seed or bulb) will respond to different environmental factors, such as temperature, amount of sunlight, light quality, and more.

    As these conditions change, chemical production inside the plant triggers the growth. In response, the plant will begin to sprout new growth.

    Many plants start growing when temperatures get warmer or the days get longer. Each plant will have specific responses, some needing higher temperatures or more light before growing. Others require less.

    Likewise, cooler temperatures can tell the plant to redirect the energy back to the roots, set seed, and die back for the fall.

    More Information on Changing Weather

    Pin image for "what happens if plants bloom early in the season." With early blooming flowers.Pin image for "what happens if plants bloom early in the season." With early blooming flowers.

    [ad_2]

    Stephanie Rose

    Source link

  • 25+ of the Best Annual Flowers to Start From Seed – Garden Therapy

    25+ of the Best Annual Flowers to Start From Seed – Garden Therapy

    [ad_1]

    Starting flowers from seed may not be as popular as vegetables, but they deserve a spot in your seed-starting tray this spring. By growing annuals from seed, you can have a garden full of colour, fragrance, and pollinators at a fraction of the price. Here are the best annual flowers to start from seed.

    Seed starting season is here, and I’ve got more than vegetables and herbs on my mind. Annual flowers are a beautiful way to add quick pops of colour to gardening beds, containers, and baskets.

    While just a pack or two of annuals doesn’t cost much, their price can quickly add up if you have multiple pots or spaces to fill. But growing flowers from seed isn’t as difficult as you may think.

    The trick is to know which annuals from seed to grow. I have a bunch of recommendations for you, including those that are quick to grow, those that can be directly sown, and those that can get started indoors.

    Let’s get into my recommendations!

    growing flowers from seedgrowing flowers from seed
    Begonia ‘Unbelievable Miss Montreal’

    Fast Growing Flower Seeds

    If you have a short growing season, are getting a late start, or simply want some quick-blooming flowers, these annuals from seeds are some of the quickest and easiest to grow.

    Sweet Alyssum

    Lobularia maritima

    Days to maturity: 8 weeks

    Timing: direct sow just before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: cover crop and filler flower, attracts beneficial insects, sweet-smelling flowers.

    Calendula

    Calendula officinalis

    Days to maturity: 6-8 weeks

    Timing: direct sow in early spring when there’s still light frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: medicinal flower great for skincare, bright orange in colour, edible petals.

    calendula - annuals from seedcalendula - annuals from seed

    Nasturtium

    Tropaeolum spp.

    Days to maturity: 4-6 weeks

    Timing: direct sow one week after last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: vining plant, edible flowers, drought tolerant, companion plant.

    nasturtium - seed starting flowersnasturtium - seed starting flowers

    Sweet Pea

    Lathyrus odoratus

    Days to maturity: 7-9 weeks

    Timing: direct sow when light frost is a possibility

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: vining plant, sweet fragrance, array of colours available.

    Marigold

    Tagetes spp.

    Days to maturity: 8 weeks

    Timing: direct sow two weeks before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: drought resistant, companion plant, fast-growing, bright orange blooms.

    gardening bed with marigolds, borage, calendulagardening bed with marigolds, borage, calendula

    Portulaca

    Portulaca grandiflora

    Days to maturity: 6-7 weeks

    Timing: direct sow after the threat of frost has passed

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: annual succulent, bright flowers that grow in clusters, toxic to cats and dogs.

    Zinnia

    Zinnia elegans

    Days to maturity: 8 weeks

    Timing: Direct sow after last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: vibrant colours, perennial in temperate areas, cutting flower.

    red zinnia flowers - growing flowers from seedred zinnia flowers - growing flowers from seed

    Petunia

    Petunia spp.

    Days to maturity: 6-8 weeks

    Timing: start indoors 10-12 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: great in containers and baskets, lots of variety in colour and flower types, fast-growing.

    Purple petunias in a hanging basket - annuals from seedPurple petunias in a hanging basket - annuals from seed

    Annuals From Seed to Direct Sow

    Many annual flowers can easily be started from seed and enjoyed that same year. Sow these flowers directly in your garden outdoors in the spring and watch them bloom in no time!

    Spider Flower

    Cleome spp.

    Days to maturity: 10-11 weeks

    Timing: direct sow 3-4 weeks after last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: exotic looking flowers, attracts beneficial insects and hummingbirds.

    Purple Hyacinth Bean

    Lablab purpureus

    Days to maturity: 12-13 weeks

    Timing: direct sow after the danger of frost has passed

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: vining plant, fast growth, showy seed pods.

    Cornflower

    Centaurea cyanus

    Days to maturity: 10 weeks

    Timing: direct sow just before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: papery blooms, cut flower, attracts pollinators.

    array of coloured picked cornflowers - growing flowers from seedarray of coloured picked cornflowers - growing flowers from seed

    Cosmos

    Cosmos bipinnatus

    Days to maturity: 8-11 weeks

    Timing: Direct sow after the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: attracts pollinators, cottage flower, daisy-like blooms.

    Sunflower

    Helianthus annuus

    Days to maturity: 10-13 weeks

    Timing: direct sow after last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: tall flower great for borders, many varieties available, cut flower.

    double sunflowers - seed starting flowersdouble sunflowers - seed starting flowers

    Love-in-a-Mist

    Nigella damascena

    Days to maturity: 12-13 weeks

    Timing: direct sow 1-2 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: hardy, lacy foliage, cut flower, seed heads used in dried flower arrangements.

    Nigella growing in front of lavender - growing flowers from seedNigella growing in front of lavender - growing flowers from seed

    Phlox

    Phlox drummondii

    Days to maturity: 7-9 weeks

    Timing: direct sow once the ground is workable.

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: great for containers, variety of colours, very low maintenance.

    California Poppy

    Eschscholzia californica

    Days to maturity: 8-12 weeks

    Timing: direct sow after the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: drought tolerant, self-sow, bright orange colour.

    California poppy - annuals from seedCalifornia poppy - annuals from seed

    Borage

    Borago officinalis

    Days to maturity: 8 weeks

    Timing: direct sow after the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: edible flower, drought tolerant, companion plant, attracts pollinators.

    borage flower - seed starting flowersborage flower - seed starting flowers

    Annuals From Seed to Start Indoors

    Here are some other great annuals from seed to start indoors before the growing season. They have longer growing times to reach maturity and need a head start indoors.

    Ageratum

    Ageratum houstonianum

    Days to maturity: 8-10 weeks

    Timing: begin indoors 6-8 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: looks good in mass plantings, long bloom period, unique blue colour.

    Scabiosa

    Scabiosa spp.

    Days to maturity: 13-14 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 4-5 weeks before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: attract pollinators and hummingbirds, cut flower, long bloom time.

    Scabiosa stallata - growing flowers from seedScabiosa stallata - growing flowers from seed
    Scabiosa stallata

    Vinca

    Catharanthus roseus

    Days to maturity: 12 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 10-12 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: fast-growing, drought tolerant, toxic to animals and people.

    Celosia

    Celosia plumosa

    Days to maturity: 12-16 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 6-8 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun or partial shade

    Traits: wide range of bright colours, heat tolerant, cutting flower.

    orange celosia annual grown from seedorange celosia annual grown from seed
    Celosia cristata ‘Twisted Orange’

    Impatiens

    Impatiens spp.

    Days to maturity: 12 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 6-10 weeks before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: partial to full shade

    Traits: shade lover, bedding plant, prolific bloomer, large range of colours.

    Salvia

    Salvia longispicata

    Bloom time: early summer

    Timing: start seeds indoors 10-12 weeks before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: attracts bees, great container plant, deer and rabbit resistant.

    Salvia 'Sally Fun' - annuals from seedSalvia 'Sally Fun' - annuals from seed
    Salvia ‘Sally Fun’

    Verbena

    Verbena x hybrida

    Days to maturity: 13 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 12-14 weeks before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun

    Traits: fast-growing, long bloom time, some varieties are toxic to pets.

    Begonia

    Begonia spp.

    Days to maturity: 12-15 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 12 weeks before the last frost

    Sunlight requirements: Partial sun to full shade

    Traits: shade lover, low maintenance, long bloom time.

    begonias -growing flowers from seedbegonias -growing flowers from seed
    Begonia ‘Megawatt’

    Geranium

    Pelargonium spp.

    Days to maturity: 16-20 weeks

    Timing: Start seeds indoors 10 weeks before the last frost date

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: great container and bedding plant, long bloom period, lightly scented, mildly toxic to pets.

    Regal geranium - annuals from seedRegal geranium - annuals from seed
    Regal geranium

    Lobelia

    Lobelia erinus

    Days to maturity: 12-16 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 6-8 weeks before transplanting outside to temperatures of 10 °C or warmer

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: trailing plant, available in true blue and other colours, attracts pollinators.

    Close up of blue and white lobelia in a black potClose up of blue and white lobelia in a black pot

    Pansy

    Viola tricolor var. hortensis

    Days to maturity: 12 weeks

    Timing: start seeds 10-12 weeks indoors before last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: edible flower, variety of colours available, cold tolerant and hardy.

    pansies growing in shadepansies growing in shade

    Snapdragons

    Antirrhinum majus

    Days to maturity: 8-12 weeks

    Timing: start seeds indoors 8-10 weeks before planting after last frost

    Sunlight requirements: full sun to partial shade

    Traits: available in a wide range of colours, cutting flower.

    orange snapdragon flowers - seed starting flowersorange snapdragon flowers - seed starting flowers

    Frequently Asked Questions About Growing Flowers From Seed

    What is the best time to plant flower seeds?

    Some annuals from seed require cold stratification to grow. This means it’s typically best to plant them while there is still a chance of frost or in autumn.

    Otherwise, most seeds are best planted after the threat of frost has passed or started indoors. Most seed packets will tell you when to start the seeds. For an early start, many gardeners can begin starting seeds 6-8 weeks before the last frost.

    How do you start a flower from a seed?

    When seed-starting flowers indoors, you’ll want a good quality seed-starting soil mix. You can use many household items as seed starting containers, such as egg cartons or toilet paper tubes.

    Moisture is necessary for the seeds to germinate. Keeping the soil damp with a greenhouse dome on top will keep the environment humid. Once the seeds have germinated, they will need lots of sunlight either from a sunny windowsill or a grow light.

    For more detailed information on starting seeds indoors, view this post.

    What are the easiest flowers to grow from seed?

    If you’re looking for easy, then look for annuals from seed that you can directly sow. Beyond supplemental watering and the usual thinning, they should require less maintenance compared to those that need to be started indoors. If you’re a beginner, avoid starting perennials from seed.

    Should I sow flower seeds directly?

    Direct sowing is the easiest way to grow flowers from seed, but not all flowers are well suited for it. Avoid direct sowing if the seed requires high soil temperatures to germinate or requires a long time to reach maturity.

    On the other hand, some flowers don’t like to be transplanted and are best to be only directly sown. Most seed packets should advise on whether or not to direct sow or begin seeds indoors.

    yellow costa calendula grown from seedyellow costa calendula grown from seed
    Calendula Costa Mix

    More Flowers to Add to Your Garden

    Pin image for 25+ annual flowers to start from seedPin image for 25+ annual flowers to start from seed

    [ad_2]

    Stephanie Rose

    Source link

  • Eco-Conscious Florists: How to Know Your Cut Flowers Are Sustainable

    Eco-Conscious Florists: How to Know Your Cut Flowers Are Sustainable

    [ad_1]

    Above: A field of dahlias at organic flower farm Tiny Hearts Farm in the Hudson Valley. Photograph by Melissa Ozawa, from Ask the Experts: Organic Flower Farms Share Tips on Growing a Cutting Garden.

    Locally sourced, field-grown flowers—ideally grown using sustainable farming methods—are the gold standard for sustainable floristry, says Feldmann, and if a florist is doing the work to source these blooms, they’re likely talking about it in their marketing materials. 

    4. They’re selective about imported flowers.

    However, it may not be realistic for a florist’s flowers to all come from local farms. “There are times where I need a certain thing or I just need to fill the gaps in, especially now in the winter time,” explains Hauser, who tries to source as much as she can from local growers. When it comes to imports, eco-conscious florists will look for certifications like Fair Trade and USDA Organic that demonstrate sustainable and fair work practices throughout supply chains. She notes, however, that some farms may use organic methods but simply can’t afford the certification process, so it’s best to do your own research.

    5. They never wrap flowers in plastic.

    No plastic here. This beautifully wrapped seasonal  Orchid Bouquet is currently available at Isa Isa in Los Angeles. (Read about founder Sophia Moreno-Bunge’s floral residency in Italy in My Two Months at Villa Lena In Tuscany.)
    Above: No plastic here. This beautifully wrapped seasonal  Orchid Bouquet is currently available at Isa Isa in Los Angeles. (Read about founder Sophia Moreno-Bunge’s floral residency in Italy in My Two Months at Villa Lena In Tuscany.)

    “Sustainable florists present their designs simply with natural fibers and easily recyclable or compostable materials like unbleached paper and natural fiber ties,” says Feldmann. They also avoid plastics materials like plastic wraps, balloons, and synthetic ribbon that are staples in conventional flower shops.

    6. They have a compost bin.

    In addition to avoiding packaging waste, sustainable florists are diverting their floral waste from the landfill by composting. Hauser uses a local commercial composting pick up service and notes that composting should be a no-brainer for most businesses because it offsets their expenses from conventional trash removal.

    7. They’re local but they might not have a shop.

    Hauser’s Field Trip Flowers arrangements, ready for local delivery. Photograph courtesy of Field Trip Flowers.
    Above: Hauser’s Field Trip Flowers arrangements, ready for local delivery. Photograph courtesy of Field Trip Flowers.

    A retail storefront inevitably means more waste, which is one of the reasons Hauser no longer has a retail shop. “People didn’t understand the difference between my shop and the traditional florist down the street,” she says. “I don’t have the huge display cooler with the overabundance of imported flowers that people are used to seeing.” With her storefront online, Hauser’s sustainably-minded customers can pick up at her studio or request local delivery. Hauser says that she sees many of her eco-conscious floral designer peers doing the same, but she notes that moving your retail online is not the same as an online-only business that ships flowers to customers via fossil-fuel burning overnight delivery.

    See also:

    (Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How to Grow Nasturtiums

    How to Grow Nasturtiums

    [ad_1]

    The nasturtiums planted in the cement blocks of my garden border are a familiar and much loved part of my winter garden. Learn how to grow nasturtiums, and add bright pops of color to your garden (and spice to your salad) with this easy-to-grow edible flower.


    How to grow nasturtiums

    Disclaimer: this post contains affiliate links. See my disclosure policy for more information.


    7 Tips For How To Grow Nasturtiums

    Follow these 7 tips to learn how to grow nasturtiums, and keep reading to learn how to grow nasturtiums in Arizona.

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    1. Plant nasturtiums at the right time

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    Alternatively, large nasturtium seeds are simple to plant, and it’s easy to direct sow nasturtiums in the garden.

    Sow seeds in the garden 2 weeks before the last frost. Plant seeds ½ to 1 inch deep and 5-6 inches apart. 

    For square foot gardening, plant 1 per square.

    In the low desert of Arizona plant nasturtiums from October through January. In the low desert of Arizona plant nasturtiums from October through January. 

    In the low desert of Arizona, plant nasturtiums from October through January



    2. Choose the right location to plant nasturtiums

    Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.

    Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.

    Nasturtiums prefer cooler weather, so in warm climates grow plants in partial shade (4-6 hours of sun) to prolong their growing season. In cool climates, plant nasturtiums in full sun.

    This adaptable plant grows well in shady areas, poor soil, dry conditions, and areas where other plants may not grow.

    Nasturtiums are frost-sensitive; you may need to cover them during a frost event. 


    3. Choose the best type for your location

    Nasturtiums come in a range of colors and varieties including trailing, vining, and bush. 

    Trailing varieties make an excellent ground cover in shady spots and areas with poor soil. Trailing types can also be trained along a fence, cascade down from a container, or fill in a border. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    4. Encourage blooms

    If you want an abundance of flowers, do not fertilize nasturtiums. Nutrient-rich soil grows plenty of green leaves, but not as many blooms. 

    Removing faded blooms also encourages more flowers. Trim back container-grown nasturtiums to keep the plant tidy and producing flowers.

    The two photos above are of the same area of my yard in different years, but in the second image the seeds were planted in rich compost. We had an abundance of leaves that year, but not a lot of blooms.


    5. Grow nasturtiums as a companion plant

    Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. For instance, nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers.

    Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. Nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers. Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. Nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers. 

    Tomatoes, radishes, squash, and fruit trees benefit from nasturtiums planted nearby. Nasturtiums are a ‘trap crop’ (insects feed on and lay their eggs in trap crops, instead of in other areas of the garden).


    6. Don’t forget, nasturtiums are edible!

    The flowers, leaves, and stems of nasturtiums are all edible. They have a fresh peppery taste and can be quite spicy! To harvest blooms and leaves for eating, pick early in the day (but after the dew dries). 

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    Growing and Using Edible Flowers Growing and Using Edible Flowers 

    7. Save seeds to share and plant

    Each flower sets several seeds, and nasturtiums will self-seed easily year after year. At the end of each season, collect extra seeds from the ground to save and share, or plant in other areas. 

    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide

    The large seeds are easy to collect. I often enlist my kids and their friends to collect the seeds for me (the going rate in my garden is 1 cent per seed). For more information, read this post about saving seeds

    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide

    Bonus Tip: How to grow nasturtiums in Arizona

    When to plant nasturtiumsWhen to plant nasturtiums
    • Plant nasturtiums directly in the garden from October through January in the low-desert of Arizona.
    • You can expect blooms from about February through May
    • Nasturtiums planted in shaded areas will last a little longer (into May) than those planted in full sun. 
    • Nasturtiums thrive in cool winters. If we get a frost event for a day or two, cover them with frost cloth and they may survive.  
    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide


    Want to add more color to your garden with flowers?


    Perpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9BPerpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9B

    Flowers to Plant Outside & Seeds to Start Indoors Each Month in the Low Desert of Arizona.
    PLANTING GUIDE: Each month lists annual flowers and bulbs to plant outside & seeds to start indoors.
    BLOOMING GUIDE: Photos show what may be in bloom that month.


    If this post about how to grow nasturtiums was helpful, please share it:


    [ad_2]

    Angela Judd

    Source link

  • How to Grow Nasturtiums

    How to Grow Nasturtiums

    [ad_1]

    The nasturtiums planted in the cement blocks of my garden border are a familiar and much loved part of my winter garden. Learn how to grow nasturtiums, and add bright pops of color to your garden (and spice to your salad) with this easy-to-grow edible flower.


    How to grow nasturtiums

    Disclaimer: this post contains affiliate links. See my disclosure policy for more information.


    7 Tips For How To Grow Nasturtiums

    Follow these 7 tips to learn how to grow nasturtiums, and keep reading to learn how to grow nasturtiums in Arizona.

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    1. Plant nasturtiums at the right time

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. Start nasturtium seeds indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost, and wait to plant outside until all danger of frost is past. 

    Alternatively, large nasturtium seeds are simple to plant, and it’s easy to direct sow nasturtiums in the garden.

    Sow seeds in the garden 2 weeks before the last frost. Plant seeds ½ to 1 inch deep and 5-6 inches apart. 

    For square foot gardening, plant 1 per square.

    In the low desert of Arizona plant nasturtiums from October through January. In the low desert of Arizona plant nasturtiums from October through January. 

    In the low desert of Arizona, plant nasturtiums from October through January



    2. Choose the right location to plant nasturtiums

    Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.

    Grow nasturtiums in moist well-drained soil. Water well until plant is established and then provide regular water.

    Nasturtiums prefer cooler weather, so in warm climates grow plants in partial shade (4-6 hours of sun) to prolong their growing season. In cool climates, plant nasturtiums in full sun.

    This adaptable plant grows well in shady areas, poor soil, dry conditions, and areas where other plants may not grow.

    Nasturtiums are frost-sensitive; you may need to cover them during a frost event. 


    3. Choose the best type for your location

    Nasturtiums come in a range of colors and varieties including trailing, vining, and bush. 

    Trailing varieties make an excellent ground cover in shady spots and areas with poor soil. Trailing types can also be trained along a fence, cascade down from a container, or fill in a border. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. Dwarf varieties grow low to the ground and are more mounded. Grow them where space is limited or in containers. 

    4. Encourage blooms

    If you want an abundance of flowers, do not fertilize nasturtiums. Nutrient-rich soil grows plenty of green leaves, but not as many blooms. 

    Removing faded blooms also encourages more flowers. Trim back container-grown nasturtiums to keep the plant tidy and producing flowers.

    The two photos above are of the same area of my yard in different years, but in the second image the seeds were planted in rich compost. We had an abundance of leaves that year, but not a lot of blooms.


    5. Grow nasturtiums as a companion plant

    Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. For instance, nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers.

    Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. Nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers. Nasturtiums are a great way to prevent pests organically. Nasturtiums help repel squash bugs, whiteflies, and borers. 

    Tomatoes, radishes, squash, and fruit trees benefit from nasturtiums planted nearby. Nasturtiums are a ‘trap crop’ (insects feed on and lay their eggs in trap crops, instead of in other areas of the garden).


    6. Don’t forget, nasturtiums are edible!

    The flowers, leaves, and stems of nasturtiums are all edible. They have a fresh peppery taste and can be quite spicy! To harvest blooms and leaves for eating, pick early in the day (but after the dew dries). 

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  To keep flowers fresh longer, immerse in cold water for about 10 minutes immediately after picking. Use flowers and leaves immediately, or store them in the refrigerator in a damp paper towel. The unripe seed pods can be pickled for a tasty caper substitution.  

    Growing and Using Edible Flowers Growing and Using Edible Flowers 

    7. Save seeds to share and plant

    Each flower sets several seeds, and nasturtiums will self-seed easily year after year. At the end of each season, collect extra seeds from the ground to save and share, or plant in other areas. 

    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide

    The large seeds are easy to collect. I often enlist my kids and their friends to collect the seeds for me (the going rate in my garden is 1 cent per seed). For more information, read this post about saving seeds

    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide

    Bonus Tip: How to grow nasturtiums in Arizona

    When to plant nasturtiumsWhen to plant nasturtiums
    • Plant nasturtiums directly in the garden from October through January in the low-desert of Arizona.
    • You can expect blooms from about February through May
    • Nasturtiums planted in shaded areas will last a little longer (into May) than those planted in full sun. 
    • Nasturtiums thrive in cool winters. If we get a frost event for a day or two, cover them with frost cloth and they may survive.  
    How to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing GuideHow to Grow Nasturtiums: Nasturtium Growing Guide


    Want to add more color to your garden with flowers?


    Perpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9BPerpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9B

    Flowers to Plant Outside & Seeds to Start Indoors Each Month in the Low Desert of Arizona.
    PLANTING GUIDE: Each month lists annual flowers and bulbs to plant outside & seeds to start indoors.
    BLOOMING GUIDE: Photos show what may be in bloom that month.


    If this post about how to grow nasturtiums was helpful, please share it:


    [ad_2]

    Lauren

    Source link

  • UMG Says You Can’t Listen To Taylor Swift On TikTok

    UMG Says You Can’t Listen To Taylor Swift On TikTok

    [ad_1]

    Part of the music industry in today’s world involves promoting via social media – especially on platforms with mega-influence like TikTok. Artists will tease songs, new artists will be discovered on the platform, and if a sound goes viral tracks can resurge and soar into popularity. You saw it with songs like “Kill Bill” by SZA and “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus.


    Well, bad news. As of February 1, Universal Music Group (UMG) has taken their artists’ music off TikTok after accusing the social media platform of offering unfair reimbursement to artists and allowing AI to generate recordings using an artist’s voice. In an open letter on its website, UMG states,

    “TikTok’s tactics are obvious: use its platform power to hurt vulnerable artists and try to intimidate us into conceding to a bad deal that undervalues music and shortchanges artists and songwriters as well as their fans,”

    And the drama doesn’t stop there. In a brief response, TikTok snaps back with,

    “TikTok has been able to reach ‘artist-first’ agreements with every other label and publisher. Clearly, Universal’s self-serving actions are not in the best interests of artists, songwriters, and fans.”

    Who Does UMG Represent?

    Screenshot from TikTok Jai Phillips

    Among UMG’s lengthy list of artists are: Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Harry Styles, Blackpink, The 1975, Beyonce, Rihanna, Lana Del Rey, and Lewis Capaldi. In the heated letter released by the music label, they mention how TikTok began to take the music down of their smaller artists, but kept their bigger names that generate revenue for the app in an effort to control them. As UMG’s response, they took every single artist away.

    What Happens To UMG’s Music On TikTok?

    @noahkahanmusic thanks love you guys #newmusic #stickseason #noahkahan #noahkahanmusic #forever ♬ Angel – Sarah McLachlan

    That means videos using popular songs like Harry Styles’ “As It Was” or Lana Del Rey’s “Say Yes To Heaven” are now met with “This Sound Is Not Available.” The only sounds under names like Olivia Rodrigo and Noah Kahan are fan-made edits and manipulations of songs.

    This means both TikTok and the music industry will change a bit. A lot of artists will have less of an interest in building platforms on TikTok, because it’s not like they can play their music there. TikTok itself will have to focus on edits behind a lot of their “Get Ready With Me” videos and “Target Haul” clips.

    It’s a standoff between the largest record label in music industry history and the biggest social media platform in the world.



    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • A Guide to Planting Gaillardia

    A Guide to Planting Gaillardia

    [ad_1]

    Commemorating M. Gaillard de Marentonneau, a French patron of botany (Compositae). Blanket flower. A small genus of annuals and perennials, natives of America, with a long flowering period, useful for cut flowers. Somewhat untidy in habit, the long stalks fall about in wind and rain. Gaillardias need some twiggy stakes to help to keep the flowers clean and in full view.

    Annual species cultivated

    • G. amblyodon, 2-3 feet, maroon-red flowers, autumn.
    • G. pulchella, 2-3 feet, crimson and yellow flowers, late summer and autumn, best treated as a half-hardy annual; vars. brenziana, double flowers in reds and yellows ; picta, larger flower-heads. `Indian Chief’ with coppery-scarlet flowers is a named cultivar. In addition seedsmen usually offer mixed annual types under such names as ‘Choice Double Mixed’, `Special Mixture’, and ‘Double Fireball’.

    Perennial species cultivated

    All garden varieties originate from G. aristata (syn. G. grandiflora) and comprise a great range of colour from pale primrose-yellow to crimson and bold orange, all flowering from June to October. Named cultivars include ‘Burgundy’, 2 feet, rich wine red with a narrow yellow frill along the outer edges of the petals; ‘Copper Beauty’, 2 feet, smaller flowers of orange-yellow suffused with brown; ‘Dazzler’, 2 feet, yellow with brown-red central zone; ‘Fire-bird’, 2 feet, a vigorous variety with flame-orange flowers; ‘Goblin’, 1 foot, dwarf, yellow with red zone; `Ipswich Beauty’, 2-3 feet, large deep yellow flowers touched with reddish-brown ; `Monarch Strain’, 2 feet, mixed colours; ‘Nana Nieski’, 1-1 1/2 feet, red and yellow flowers on shorter stems; `The Prince’, 2 feet, very large flowers up to 4 inches across, deep yellow tinged reddish-brown at the centre; `Tokaj’, 2 feet, wine-red and tangerine; `Wirral Flame’, 2 feet, a strong growing variety, tangerine flowers tipped yellow; `Yellow Queen’, 2 feet, golden-yellow.

    Cultivation

    A sunny border in a moderately light soil is ideal and the drainage should be good. The annual kinds are raised from seed sown in March in gentle heat and gradually hardened off and planted in the border in late May to flower for the remainder of the season.

    Twiggy stakes are needed for good effects, and bold planting repays in garden decoration. The perennial kinds prefer drier soils. Autumn and winter damp is their enemy, and if they do not survive, it is probably because of dampness. On the other hand, a sun-baked soil stunts the plants, so a mulch of leaf-mould or decayed manure in summer is helpful. Liquid feeds can be given to good advantage when the plants are coming into flower. Named varieties are best propagated from root cuttings taken at any time between February and April and put in a sandy box in the frame or A greenhouse. Those that are taken early and do well may flower the first year.

    Alternatively, basal cuttings taken from August to October, put into a sandy compost in a cold frame or under a cloche will soon get away. The plants can be divided in either October or March and any roots left in the ground at this time will sprout again.


    Free Garden CatalogFree Garden Catalog

    [ad_2]

    Frederick Leeth

    Source link

  • Growing Guide for Hepatica

    Growing Guide for Hepatica

    [ad_1]

    Hepatica Plant Care

    Today I went out my back door and noticed that one of my rosebushes was, unexpectedly, sporting a fresh new flower bud.  It was within a day or so of opening up–small, greenish and obviously defiant of the season.  The bud was an oddity on a rosebush that is itself an oddity.  When I bought the small white-flowered shrub last summer it had one blossom that was half white and half red, and looked as if it had been half-dipped in red paint.  Though my February bud was not a “half and half” flower, I took its appearance as a harbinger of spring, plucked it, and delivered it to a friend who shares my belief in such things.

                I started thinking about other early spring flowers-winter aconite, snowdrops, and crocuses.  Not long ago I was reintroduced to liverwort (Hepatica), which has all the virtues of the little spring-flowering anemones that you see in all the catalogs, but obviously lacks a big league public relations person.  It is a shame, because hepatica is eminently deserving of greater renown.

    In a world where connections are so important, hepatica has them.  It is a member of the buttercup (Ranunculaceae) family, like common buttercup, clematis, and hellebore.  In truth, single flowered hepaticas are almost dead ringers for windflowers (Anemone blanda).  The blossoms are petite and daisy-like, in shades of blue, lavendar, white , rose and pink.  Like many of the earliest flowers, it is a low grower, unwilling to rise taller than about 12″ and expose its flowers and foliage to cold March winds.

                Hepatica acutiloba is a native American liverwort, occurring naturally in the eastern part of the continent-at least those parts not yet paved over.  Appearing in March, it has light lavender flowers and leaves that have three lobes apiece with smooth tops and slightly fuzzy undersides.  In centuries past, people thought the leaves resembled human livers.  Hepatikos is the Greek word for liver, hence both the botanical and common names.

    Hepatica nobilis var. americana

    Another native liverwort is Hepatica nobilis var. americana.  It is similar to Hepatica acutiloba, but its leaves are sometimes tinged with purple, and its flowers can be pale blue or almost white in addition to lavender.  Both types of hepatica are woodland plants, thriving in light to moderate shade, and preferring the acid soil common to woodland areas. Liverwort is truly a plant that you can install then forget.  When you remember it sometime later, chances are it will be hard at work forming an attractive little colony–making itjust about perfect for many gardeners.

                Like many plants with parts that supposedly resemble internal organs of the human body, liverwort has long been used for all kinds of tonics and potions.  The ancient Greeks associated liver problems with symptoms ranging from indigestion to cowardice, and dosed sufferers with concoctions made from liverwort leaves.  Native Americans made a similar tea and used it to calm coughs and ease sore throat pain.  Later on, American hucksters perfected “Dr. Roder’s Liverwort and Tar Syrup”, a delightful-sounding patent medicine sold as a kidney remedy in the 1860’s.  Needless to say, modern medicine has abandoned the liverwort bandwagon.

                Just because liverwort will not really fix your liver doesn’t mean that it can’t remedy your winter doldrums.  For color variation, try the European Hepatica nobilis var. nobilis ‘Pink’, which has the same daisy-like flowers in a rosy hue.  Another European variety, Hepatica transsilvancia has lovely blue flowers and leaves that can be three or five-lobed.

                If you decide to make liverwort a new passion, you can always seek out some of the Japanese double varieties, some of which sell for hair-raising prices.  Many of these are bi or tri-colors with flower forms that resemble dahlias or chrysanthemums rather than simple daisies.  I love ‘Aofuku’, which one catalog describes as having “Large white petals that are almost airbrushed over with blue.the blue [is] slightly darker as you go near the edges and near white in the center.”  The central disc is green.  If you prefer pink, there is ‘Saichou’, which has “a ring of five large pink oval petals [that] hold a few layers of smaller pointed petals that are white edged pink with a central light green stripe surrounding a light yellowish-green center.”

                Buy hepaticas now, whether plain or fancy,  and you will probably be the first on your block or perhaps in your town to do so.  Thimble Farms, a Canadian grower, has an excellent selection, including the highly collectible Japanese varieties.  Contact them at 175 Arbutus Road, Salt Spring Island V8K  1A3  British Columbia, Canada; (250) 537-5788;  www.thimblefarms.com.

    Press Here!
    Yellow Rose
    SWORD LILIES
    CHANGE IN THE GARDEN
    UNFORGETTABLE
    FRESH VEGGIES

    by E. Ginsburg


    Free Garden CatalogFree Garden Catalog

    [ad_2]

    Frederick Leeth

    Source link

  • Growing Pansies

    Growing Pansies

    [ad_1]

    Pansies are annual garden flowers (blooms for only one year, then dies) that are usually the first you find for sale in stores in spring.  Pansies have been around for many years and are popular, being easy to grow and so colorful during the cooler days of spring and fall.

    In cool northern climates, pansies will bloom well into summer when temperatures turn hot.  In warm southern climates they’re often planted again in fall, lasting into and even through the winter.  Keeping flowers picked off after bloom (if you have just a few in containers) will keep them more tidy and promote more blooms. If you’re lucky, they’ll self-sow seeds, coming back in future years.

    Pansies (Viola x wittrockiana) are hybrids of several species, the most common being the viola known as “Heartsease” (Viola tricolor).  While the terms viola and pansy are often used interchangeably, there actually is a difference.  Flowers of violas are usually smaller, those of pansies larger.  The real difference, though, is that pansies have four petals pointing upward and one pointing downward; violas or violets have three petals pointing upward and two downward.

    Pansy flowers usually have blotches or markings, making them resemble a face.  This was first discovered on a sport (mutation) in the late 1830s, at the time that pansies were first becoming popular in Europe and England, with hundreds of varieties.  Originally, pansies began as wildflowers in Europe and western Asia.

    Pansies continue to be bred, with colors ranging from white to almost black, and most any color and combination in between.  There are ones with large flowers such as the Majestic Giant series (3 to 4 inches across), medium such as the Crown and Imperial series (2 to 3 inches), and multiflora such as the Maxim series and the orange Padparadja (one to 2 inches).  Series are simply groups of cultivars (cultivated varieties) that differ in color but share other traits such as flower shape, size, and hardiness.

    Several pansies have been All-America Selections winners such as Majestic Giant White Face in 1966, Imperial Blue in 1975, and both Maxim Marina and Padparadja in 1991.  Some pansies have a pleasant scent—generally yellow and blue ones—the scent most noticed in early morning and at dusk.

    There even is a new category of trailing pansies, which spread over two feet wide.  WonderFall and Cool Wave are a couple of these to look for in stores. They are best in hanging baskets, as groundcovers, or spilling over edges of large containers.

    If you want to start pansies from seeds, plan on plenty of time—14 to 16 weeks before planting outside in early spring.  This means you’ll need to start them in late January or early February indoors, under grow lights or on a sunny windowsill.  It will take several weeks for the tiny seeds to germinate and grow a couple sets of true leaves, at which time you can start giving them a dilute fertilizer.  From sowing onward, make sure to keep the soil moist.  A well-drained seed-sowing mix should be used for sowing and growing on, not soil.

    If you don’t want the challenge or have the time to start your own pansies, you can buy them in spring ready to plant in the garden or pots.  Use a good potting mix for containers such as windowboxes, adding some slow release or organic fertilizer (according to your choice), at the labeled rates.  Use such fertilizer too in the garden, to which you’ve added an inch or two of compost.  Keep plants watered, especially after planting, but avoid overhead watering—water the soil instead to prevent leaf and flower diseases.  Roots may rot if soils are waterlogged and too wet.

    There are few pests that bother pansies, and even aphids and spider mites that may get on them usually do little harm.  If you find slugs eating your pansies, there are many remedies to try including saucers of beer (slugs are attracted to them, then drown), copper strips, egg shells, even coffee grounds sprinkled among plants.  Put a roll of moist newspaper in the garden which slugs may hide in during the day (they tend to feed at night), then just remove the paper and slugs.

    Plant pansies six to ten inches apart. Even the largest stay under one foot high and wide.  Full sun is fine in cool, northern climate.  Morning sun is best in warmer climates.

    Other than just enjoying pansies for their cheery spring color in containers, along walks and edges, or massed in borders, you can eat the flowers in salads and dessert.  Their flavor is slightly minty.  Or, pick them to dry and use in potpourri.  In the Language of Flowers, popular in Victorian times, pansies represented the thoughts of lovers.  The word pansy comes from the French word “pensee” meaning thought or remembrance. During the 19th century they were used for “love potions”.  Others have used the flowers as a natural dye.

    Related to pansies, but with much smaller flowers, are Johnny Jump-Ups.  Although traditionally in purple, lavender and yellow, you can find these with other colors such as white, wine red, and pastels.  They’re great to interplant with spring bulbs, and usually come back each year from self-sowing.

    For its ease of growth and color, pansy was named by the National Garden Bureau as the annual Flower of the Year for 2017.  You can learn more about this and other flowers of the year on their website (ngb.org).
    Dr. Leonard Perry, Horticulture Professor Emeritus
    University of Vermont

    [ad_2]

    Dr. Leonard Perry

    Source link

  • Too Early 2024 Grammy Predictions

    Too Early 2024 Grammy Predictions

    [ad_1]

    The end of the year calls for reflection — hence our 2023 Popdust Music Awards, celebrating all of the great music we heard last year. And now, the beginning of the year indicates a time of anticipation. For that, we have our
    2024 Artists to Watch, which also means that Awards Season is right around the corner.


    Starting with the Golden Globes on January 7, we are about to experience countless red carpet shots, couples debuts (
    still waiting for you, Sabrina Carpenter and Barry Keoghan), and teary-eyed acceptance speeches.

    While there are the BAFTAs, the Emmys, the Oscars, and the SAG Awards, my speciality is music. And there is no bigger mecca for musicians than
    the GRAMMY Awards. Held on February 4, 2024, and hosted by comedian Trevor Noah, the GRAMMYs are music’s biggest night.

    Awards Season brings out everyone’s inner critic. Suddenly, we think we know more than the Recording Academy. Every year, there are viral moments and scandalous decisions. The Recording Academy ultimately outrages the general public in some way or another — and inevitably, fandoms will take to apps like X to become the next Joan Rivers.

    It’s a delicious time of year when your favorite celebrities are forced out of hiding and into the spotlight, and we can’t wait. To get everyone in the spirit of judgment, here are
    some way-too-early GRAMMY predictions for the year!

    Record Of The Year: “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus

    Any Kid Harpoon song is a classic, and Cyrus’ return from a brief hiatus from music was met with high marks. It was Spotify’s most streamed song in a week ever, spent time at the top of Billboard’s Hot 100, and was the fastest song in Spotify history to reach 1 billion streams.

    Album Of The Year: Midnights by Taylor Swift

    She’s won this coveted award three times already, and it’s impossible to discredit the year of Taylor Swift. She is on track for the highest-grossing tour of all time with the Eras Tour, Midnights is Apple Music’s biggest pop album of all time in terms of first-day streaming, and the album is the reason she was all 10 of Billboard’s Top 10 Songs (the first time all women have dominated the charts ever). Give Swift her flowers.

    Song Of The Year: “A&W” by Lana Del Rey

    Another Jack Antonoff production, Lana Del Rey’s album is a spiritual awakening. With an essence of transcendentalism and a hint of gospel, it’s Lana to her core. “A&W” is hailed Song of the Year by many already, and it’s time we recognize her for the artist she is, was, and always will be.

    Best New Artist: Ice Spice


    I haven’t seen many people rise to the top as quickly as Ice Spice, nor have I seen someone garner such a passionate fanbase. The rapper has hits like “Deli” and collabs with rap queen Nicki Minaj on “Barbie World” and Taylor Swift on “Karma”, not to mention her Munchkin drink at Dunkin Donuts.

    Producer Of The Year (Non-Classical): Jack Antonoff

    Not only is Antonoff the mastermind behind many Taylor Swift albums, including Midnights, but he has Lana Del Rey’s multi-nominated album, “Did you know that there’s a tunnel under Ocean Boulevard?,” under his belt. He can’t miss, and for that, he wins.

    Best Pop Solo Performance: “What Was I Made For? [From The Major Motion Picture Barbie]”

    This song is stunning, productionally perfect, and sonically flawless. Billie and Finneas continue to grow as an unstoppable singer-songwriter duo who can make any song fit any moment.

    Best Pop Vocal Album: GUTS by Olivia Rodrigo

    Olivia Rodrigo wanted to have fun with her sophomore album following the immense pressure and success of her debut, SOUR. With GUTS, we had viral singles yet again that promise Rodrigo is here for the long haul.

    Best Dance/Electronic Recording: “Strong” by Romy + Fred again…

    Developing a cult following in the electronic music world, Fred again… is one of the hottest house dance artists in the world right now. Following a successful bout of live shows and reaching fans on almost every platform imaginable, “Strong” is a winner.

    Best Pop Dance Recording: “Rush” by Troye Sivan

    Troye Sivan understands how to make out-of-the-box pop music, and seals it with one hell of a dance number. He’s the embodiment of a popstar, and “Rush” was just an example of the high precedent he’s set.

    Best Rock Performance: “Not Strong Enough” by boygenius

    Compiled of Phoebe Bridgers, Julien Baker, and Lucy Dacus, boygenius is a supergroup showing the world how to rock again. “Not Strong Enough” showcases what each member brings to the group in one sound synergy.

    Best Rock Album: Starcatcher by Greta Van Fleet

    Hailed as The Next Led Zeppelin, Greta Van Fleet brings you on a journey with their Starcatcher album. Each song a delight, Greta Van Fleet has developed their sound and found their stride.

    Best R&B Performance: “Kill Bill” by SZA

    SOS is one of the best albums of the year, and while I don’t see it winning in the Big 4 due to competitors like Swift, I still think it wins in general. “Kill Bill” was one of the biggest songs and continues to be one of the most viral.

    Best Rap Performance: “Rich Flex” by Drake & 21 Savage

    The saying “I like what Drake likes” holds true for many…and the collaboration album, Her Loss, with 21 Savage was one of the biggest of the year. “Rich Flex” makes sense for two of the biggest rappers out there right now.

    Best Rap Album: Heroes & Villains by Metro Boomin’

    Metro Boomin’ is the rapper and producer responsible for countless hits like Migos’ “Ric Flair Drip”. His Heroes & Villains album is a masterclass for high quality rap, intricate detail in production and songwriting, and straight up hits.

    Watch the 2024 Grammy Awards live on February 4, 2024 at 8 PM EST exclusively on Paramount+!

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Favorite Peach Fuzz Colored Plants to Add to the Garden

    Favorite Peach Fuzz Colored Plants to Add to the Garden

    [ad_1]

    Last month, Pantone picked Peach Fuzz as its 2024 Color of the Year. The shade is warm, fuzzy, and like a gentle hug or a cozy sweater. And I’m a fan of any hue that’s close to pink or orange. In case you’re looking to embrace this color in your landscape, here are my five favorite peachy-keen plants to consider adding to the garden this year.

    1. Geum ‘ Apricot Pearl’

    Above: At left, the Geum ‘Apricot Pearl’, available at DutchGrown for $9.80 for 1 bare root. At right, the Peony ‘Coral Charm’ (photograph via TulipStore).

    Fantastically ruffled blossoms in shades of pale peach poise themselves above semi-evergreen/evergreen foliage. Growing to just under two feet tall, this perennial will bloom late spring to summer in a sunny to partially sunny spot. They’re perfect for containers, as sweet edging for garden beds, or in a cutting garden. Potentially deer-resistant and most certainly pollinator-attracting. (For more on geums, see Gardening 101: Geums). A larger (growing to three feet) alternative is the oldie but goody peony ‘Coral Charm’ that won the 1986 Gold Medal of the American Peony Society and sports frilly peachy bowl-shaped blooms.

    2. Grevillea ‘Peaches and Cream’

    Photograph of Grevillea ‘Peaches and Cream’ via Bloomables.
    Above: Photograph of Grevillea ‘Peaches and Cream’ via Bloomables.

    As if grevilleas weren’t already some of my favorite shrubs because they’re evergreen, drought-resistant, pollinator-friendly, and deer-resistant, then came along this sweetie. ‘Peaches and Cream’ has a low-maintenance mounding habit that is desirable and displays curiously curved flowers that age to shades of peachy hues. Worshiped by hummingbirds, this dense shrub grows to four to six feet high and just as wide and likes a sunny spot in well-draining soil. Hardy in USDA Zones 9-11.

    3. Rosa ‘Peach Drift’

    Photograph of Rosa ‘Peach Drift’ via Star Roses and Plants.
    Above: Photograph of Rosa ‘Peach Drift’ via Star Roses and Plants.

    If I’m going to plant a rose, it better be tough, disease-resistant, and long-blooming. ‘Peach Drift’ checks all those boxes, and now it’s on trend as well with its soft peachy-pink spring flowers that keep blooming through the end of summer. Perfect for small gardens, along walkways, and gently tumbling down slopes. Maturing to one to two feet high and two to three feet wide, this deciduous ground cover rose will accept full sun or part sun and regular drinks of water. Hardy in USDA Zones 4-11. An alternative to this rose with a more upright habit is the always-popular hybrid tea rose ‘Just Joey’, named “World’s Favorite Rose” in 1994.

    4. Abelia Hybrid ‘Peach’

    Photograph of Abelia ‘Suntastic Peach‘ via Sunset Plant Collection.
    Above: Photograph of Abelia ‘Suntastic Peach via Sunset Plant Collection.

    This new and improved abelia from Sunset comes at the right time for the gardener wanting to riff a bit on the Pantone color trend. This low-water hybrid plays like a jazz song and offers vibrant multicolors with extra warm apricot tones. I use abelias all the time in my garden designs because they’re easy to maintain, deer-resistant, and colorful; plus this new hybrid stays effortlessly compact. Tiny white blossoms are an added bonus for hungry hummingbirds. This abelia grows to two to three feet tall and three to five feet wide, and will like full sun or partly sunny spot in hot climates. It’s a great candidate for containers, low border/hedge, or evergreen structure in a low-water garden. Hardy in USDA Zones 6-10.

    5. Dahlia ‘Apricot Desire’

    Dahlia ‘Apricot Desire’ is $26.29 for 2 bulbs at Eden Brothers.
    Above: Dahlia ‘Apricot Desire’ is $26.29 for 2 bulbs at Eden Brothers.

    I am a huge dahlia devotee and am especially fond of this waterlily-like hybrid that has long stems that gift apricot peachy flowers perfect for cutting and adding to floral arrangements. Plant this tuber in the spring in a sunny spot, and you’ll be rewarded from June to the first frost with delicate peachy blossoms. Perfect for borders or added to containers, it grows quickly to three to four feet high. Hardy in USDA Zones 8-11. Another peach perfect dahlia is the Giant Ball Dahlia ‘Sweet Suzanne’.

    See also:

    (Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Popdust’s End Of Year Music Awards 2023

    Popdust’s End Of Year Music Awards 2023

    [ad_1]

    With the holiday season in full fa-la-la-la-flow, it’s time to reflect. When the year winds down, we feel a bit of burn out — you stare blankly at screens without motivation, you don’t want to work, and you’ve just spent all your money on gift giving.


    The year ends in two weeks, which means all of your social media accounts are wrapping up the past 365 days and holding a mirror up to who you truly are. For Snapchat users, you get a montage of photos and videos from those embarrassing nights out and the time you took a selfie crying.

    At Popdust, we’ve always loved music. It’s why I have a
    weekly segment rounding up popular new music and it’s why we report on so many of your most favorite artists. We’re constantly searching for the next big thing in music. And 2023 was massive for changing the soundscapes we know and love.

    For instance, country folk was the breakout genre of the year thanks to artists like Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan. Popular DJ’s like John Summit and Dom Dolla have driven a surge in popularity of house music. We’ve seen Taylor Swift take over the world, alongside rapidly rising stars like Ice Spice and SZA.

    With the recent announcement of the GRAMMY Award nominees, it’s never too early to hold our
    own award ceremony to celebrate all of the awesome music released this year. The Popdust Music Awards are for all of those 2024 hitmakers who gave us viral moments, graced our speakers, and made us sing along.

    @popsamcam The Grammy 2024 nominations are here so now it’s time to start guessing the winners. Here is who I think is taking home the major categories from Taylor Swift to Miley Cyrus #grammys2024 #grammywinner #grammypredictions #CapCut ♬ Flowers – Miley Cyrus

    That includes celebrating Taylor Swift, our Artist Of The Year, whose
    Eras Tour is the highest-grossing tour of all time at $1 billion to date! Her album, Midnights, alongside re-releases like 1989 (Taylor’s Version) and Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) were chart-toppers in their own right. Consistently breaking records like dominating the Billboard Top 10, Swift deserves her flowers.

    And speaking of flowers, Miley Cyrus is having a huge year with her new album,
    Endless Summer Vacation. “Flowers” is our Viral Song of the Year, only taking 112 days to reach Spotify’s Billions Club, the quickest in the app’s history.

    There are plenty of artists to celebrate in 2023, which means 2024’s gonna be a truly thrilling year coming up. Here are some of Popdust’s favorite artists and albums from 2023!

    Artist Of The Year: Taylor Swift
    Best Album: Midnights – Taylor Swift

    Best Deluxe Album: Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever)– Noah Kahan

    Best EDM: Another Friday Night– Joel Corry

    Best Pop: Something To Give Each Other– Troye Sivan

    Best R&B: SOS– SZA

    Best Rock: But Here We Are– The Foo Fighters

    Best Alternative: Did you know that there’s a tunnel under Ocean Boulevard– Lana Del Rey

    Best Rap: Like…?- Ice Spice

    Best Country: Zach Bryan– Zach Bryan

    Best Collaboration: Most Viral Song: “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus

    Popstar Watch: Tate McRae

    Honorable Mentions: The Record- boygenius, Heroes & Villains (Villains Version)- Metro Boomin’, The Show- Niall Horan

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Making family gatherings more memorable with seasonal flower arrangements – Growing Family

    Making family gatherings more memorable with seasonal flower arrangements – Growing Family

    [ad_1]

    Collaborative post

    Gatherings have become rare and precious in today’s busy world, where family members are scattered across cities and countries. You can opt for seasonal flower arrangements if you want to set the mood and ambience for these heartfelt events.

    Flowers can affect your mood significantly, enhancing the visual experience and making people feel calmer. Let’s explore how you can use them in your home decor.

    seasonal flower arrangement in a vase

    The benefits of seasonal flower arrangements

    Consider the vibrant vitality of sunflowers and the joyful energy of daisies; each of these blooms sets the mood in its own way.

    Due to their plentiful supply, seasonless flowers are readily available and don’t cost much. Plus, you can choose from a wide range of varieties to suit your preference. With businesses like Flower Actually enabling easy delivery, you can access them any time from the comfort of your home.

    Flower arrangements for every season

    Pastel-coloured arrangements with delicate flowers like tulips and daffodils are ideal for spring family celebrations because they convey a sense of rejuvenation and freshness. In summer, bright and colourful arrangements of bold flowers like daisies and sunflowers will be available, perfect for reflecting the lively spirit of the season.

    You can go for dried flower arrangements in autumn to create a rustic, cosy cottage feel. Similarly, you can use arrangements with pinecones and holly in winter to infuse your family celebrations with warmth.

    Flowers in family traditions

    Including flowers in your family’s traditions can strengthen your connection to nature’s beauty and help you create lovely memories. Flowers are a staple in religious ceremonies and rituals because they enhance the sensory experience and foster a calm atmosphere.

    At Hindu weddings, for example, the bride and groom exchange fresh flower garlands to symbolise their union and blessings. Incorporating flowers into your family gatherings can leave a lasting impression on everyone and improve the overall experience.

    flower bouquet and gift ribbon on aged wooden tableflower bouquet and gift ribbon on aged wooden table

    DIY floral arrangements

    You can DIY your floral arrangements to enhance your family occasions. For example, you could gather greenery and wildflowers for a charming bouquet, create a rustic centrepiece in a vase or mason jar, welcome guests with a seasonal wreath on your front door, or opt for simple table decor by placing flowers in jars tied with ribbons.

    You can even add freshness to your event with a centrepiece that blends seasonal blooms with fragrant herbs. Or for a unique touch, you could craft a long-lasting dried flower arrangement from your garden.

    Tips for creating flower arrangements

    There are a few basic rules to follow when creating memorable flower arrangements.

    Consider using unusual or unique vases to add a personal touch to your arrangements. This can help your decor stand out.

    It’s also a good idea to consider the event’s seating configuration and the specific needs of the participants.

    Finally, follow a guide to prepare and arrange your flowers like a professional.

    Conclusion

    You can enhance the overall experience and create lasting memories by actively involving flowers in your festivities. We encourage you to experiment with different blooms, infusing the joy and beauty of seasonal floral arrangements into your family gatherings.

    [ad_2]

    Catherine

    Source link

  • The all-purpose annual that carries the garden

    The all-purpose annual that carries the garden

    [ad_1]

    Thank you to Wave Petunias for partnering with me on this post. 

    I’m often asked a question that is perplexing to me: “Do you grow annuals or perennials?”

    I don’t fault the people asking the question as I think there are some people who grow one or the other, and perhaps that was more typical in the past. But the best parts of my garden rely on the combination of annuals and perennials, not to mention, shrubs, trees, bulbs and even vegetables.

    Annuals, with their season-long color and seemingly endless array of colors, are perfect for tucking around the garden to fill in a gap until another plant fills in or just generally brighten things up. And perhaps the best all-purpose annual is the petunia.

    This year I have Easy Wave Petunias in containers as well as in the ground where they bring a much needed splash of color as other plants (ahem, dahlias) take their time getting around to blooming. Easy Wave Petunias bulk up quickly (in fact I mostly bought 2-inch plants sold in six-packs) and have a nice mounded habit that works well in containers but also fills those pesky holes in the landscape.

    Easy Wave Petunias come in oodles of colors and I was feeling a strong monochromatic vibe this year. For one container I combined Lavender Sky Blue and Blue (which reads purple to me) with purple sage for a dark, textural vibe.

    I used those same colors in a nearby bed right off the patio, bringing color to an area with dahlias and alliums, including the seedheads of Allium christophii.

    In the circle garden, where I like to mass plant in segments, I mixed together all the different pink Easy Wave Petunia colors I could find, from Rose Fusion to Plum Vein. A few surprises snuck in there, including a couple of reds and one white, but the overall look is pretty interesting, especially since different colors have slightly different sized flowers.

    A mass planting of a variety of pink tones is brightening up a corner of the circle garden and the red stems of the nearby rhubarb help complete the look.
    Easy Wave Rose Fusion has beautiful dark pink veining that looks perfect with a setting sun to highlight its best attributes.

    All of these are really just getting going. Easy Wave Petunias get about 6 to 12 inches high and can grow to more than 30 inches wide, so these will keep bulking up all summer.

    Here’s what that all-blue container looked like shortly after planting. If you look at that photos above you can see how much it has filled in already.

    GROWING TIPS

    Like all heavy-blooming annuals, Easy Wave petunias appreciate regular fertilizing. I fertilize my containers with a synthetic water-soluble fertilizer every week to 10 days starting in July. I like to keep things organic for my in-ground beds so I usually use a seaweed or fish fertilizer every couple weeks on those plants.

    Petunias are also one of those plants that appreciates the occasional trim, so as soon as mine start getting a little leggy, I will cut them back by half (or even more sometimes).

    Budworm can be an issue on petunias. I’ve only dealt with them once in my life, so I don’t do anything more than keep an eye on them when I’m watering, like I do with all my plants. An organic spray with BT can be used to control budworm.

    Petunias will do best in full sun, but you can push them into part sun without a problem.

    Petunias are a classic annual, perhaps the classic annual that have been popping up in and around my garden for years.

    Last year I used Easy Wave Lavender Sky Blue in the window box where it put up with a lot of pushy neighbors and provided that gorgeous color all season.

    Easy Wave Petunias seem to nail that happy in between place of filling in well and holding up to other perennials in mixed containers and the ground without outcompeting its neighbors. It’s pretty much a perfect partner.

    [ad_2]

    Erin @ The Impatient Gardener

    Source link

  • How to Grow Ranunculus

    How to Grow Ranunculus

    [ad_1]

    When I first saw the gorgeous blooms on ranunculus flowers, I didn’t think growing them here in the low desert of Arizona was possible. I’m glad I was wrong. Learning how to grow ranunculus is easier than you think.

    The stunning rose-like blooms with tissue-thin petals almost don’t look real. Ranunculus blooms come in nearly every color on tall stems. With these five tips, learn how to grow ranunculus (even if you live in a hot summer climate like the low desert of Arizona).


    Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. See my disclosure policy for more information.


    5 Tips for How to Grow Ranunculus


    1. Plant ranunculus at the right time

    Ranunculus grows best in spring-like temperatures of about 55°F with plenty of sunlight. 

    In zones seven and warmer, there are two planting windows — late fall and again in late winter or early spring. For zones cooler than zone 7, plant in the spring after the danger of frost is passed. 

    In the low desert of Arizona, plant ranunculus corms from October to November and again from February to March (Presprout corms if planting in February – March)

    Floret’s top choices for ranunculus varieties are the La Belle Series, which includes Salmon, Champagne, Orange, Pink Picotee, and Pastel Mix.


    Perpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9BPerpetual Flower Planting Calendar for Zone 9B

    Flowers to Plant Outside & Seeds to Start Indoors Each Month in the Low Desert of Arizona.
    PLANTING GUIDE: Each month lists annual flowers and bulbs to plant outside & seeds to start indoors.
    BLOOMING GUIDE: Photos show what may be in bloom that month.


    2. Soak corms before planting

    Ranunculus are grown from claw-like ‘corms’ — a swollen underground plant stem that stores the nutrients for the plant until needed. Look for large corms, which have more stored energy and will grow larger with more blooms. I love the ranunculus corms from Renee’s Garden.

    Soak the corms in tepid water for 3 to 4 hours (not longer). The corms will absorb the moisture and often double in size.


    3. Plant ranunculus correctly

    Ranunculus grows best in rich, healthy, well-draining soil with plenty of sunlight. Add several inches of compost and a balanced organic fertilizer to the soil before planting. 

    Plant corms 2-3 inches deep and about 6 inches apart. Place ranunculus corms in the ground with the claws facing down. Fill the hole back in with soil and water well.

    • If you live in a wet climate, you may not need to water again until sprouts appear. Too much moisture in the soil may cause the corms to rot.
    • In dry climates like the low desert, keep soil evenly moist but do not overwater to prevent the corms from rotting.

    For square foot gardening, plant four corms per square foot.


    4. Care for growing ranunculus

    Overall, ranunculus is an easy plant to grow and is pest and disease-resistant. 

    Ranunculus needs plenty of sunlight to grow well. Ranunculus grows best in moist soil but does not like overwatering. If soil is not well-draining, ranunculus corms often rot.

    SPECIAL NOTE: All parts of ranunculus are poisonous when ingested. The plant sap may cause skin irritation. Poison is not residual in the soil; only the plant is poisonous.


    5. Enjoy ranunculus blooms​

    Corms planted in the fall typically bloom for about six weeks. Spring-planted corms bloom for about four weeks, depending on the weather. Once temperatures heat up, the blooms will stop. 

    In the low desert of Arizona, you can expect blooms to begin in February for fall-planted corms and continue through May for spring-planted corms.

    For the longest vase life (10-12 days!) harvest when buds are colored and “squishy like a marshmallow” but not yet open. If they are harvested after opening, the blooms last about a week. Use a floral preservative to encourage long vase life.

    Deadheading plants encourage more blooms.

    • When blooms finish, and the leaves begin to yellow and die back, cut the foliage off and stop watering. Allow the corms to dry out and go dormant.
    • If desired, dig up dormant corms and store them in a cool, dry place until it is time to plant next season.
    • When growing ranunculus for cut flowers, it is best to treat it as an annual and plant new corms each year.

    Quick and Easy Flower Arrangements from the GardenQuick and Easy Flower Arrangements from the Garden

    Visual planting guides for vegetables, herbs, fruits, flowers & vines.


    If you enjoyed this post, please share it: 

    [ad_2]

    Angela Judd

    Source link

  • The Best Shortbread Cookie With A Weed Option

    The Best Shortbread Cookie With A Weed Option

    [ad_1]

    Fall is here and people are gravitating to the kitchen to bake. The Holidays are around the corner, it is a cozy place during the dark wet weather, and everyone loves cookies – so why not embrace the holidays.

    The story of shortbread begins with the Scottish medieval “biscuit bread”. Leftover dough from bread making was dried out in a low oven until it hardened into a type of rusk: the word “biscuit” means “twice cooked”. Gradually the yeast in the bread was replaced by butter, and biscuit bread developed into shortbread. In the UK, biscuits are cookies and scones are the UK version of US biscuits.

    Thanks to chefs like California-based Loria Stern and her application of edible flowers they add color and excitement to the cookies. One of her greatest hits is the pressed flower sugar cookie, a trifle of unique beauty perfect for a party. The recipes can also include cannabutter if you want to give it a little extra excitement.

    Related: A Morsel Of Nostalgia: CannaBonbon Cookies Recipe

    You can add edible flowers to so many foods, but a sweet cookie is an excellent place for their fragrant, vegetal glory, and it complements those similar notes in cannabis flower. Using homegrown flowers as Stern does is a luxury that some climates allow, but if you’re in an urban area lacking organic bachelor’s button and calendula, rose petals and lavender will also do nicely. Try it out as fall tips into full swing for a unique but rich consumable.

    Triple Flower Shortbread

    Inspired by Loria Stern

    Estimated 5mg THC per 1/8th wedge

    2 cups all purpose flour

    1 stick unsalted butter, softened

    1 stick cannabutter*, softened

    1 tsp salt

    ½ cup powdered sugar

    1 tsp vanilla extract

    1 tbsp coarse sugar for dusting

    1 tbsp each organic rose and lavender flowers

    Sift sugar and salt into a large bowl. Add the butter and whip with an electric mixer until creamy and fluffy. Add vanilla and mix again momentarily. Fold in sifted flour with a spatula until the dough comes together.

    Related:

    Chill the dough for at least 1 hour before baking. Preheat oven to 325 degrees when you’re 15 minutes away from baking, depending on you r

    Grease a large cast iron skillet and press the dough into the pan at a 1” thickness all around. Sprinkle with flowers and sugar, then cover with parchment or plastic wrap and press the flowers and sugar gently into the dough to make them secure for baking and handling.

    Bake at 325 for 15-20 minutes until the cookie is golden, but not brown. Be sure to rotate throughout the bake time to avoid uneven cooking. Allow to cool completely before removing from the pan with a long flat spatula.

    Cut into wedges or break into rustic slices, and serve with a matching floral tea, the experience of smelling this combo alone is worth the baking effort.

    Photo by Maria Penaloza

    *Cannabutter

    Decarboxylate 2 grams of finely ground cannabis or .25 gram of concentrate. Put material in lidded mason jar or vacuum sealed bag with cannabis and one stick of butter. Heat in water bath just under boiling for at least 1 hour. Strain and cool to use in recipes.

    Complete any high tea with these beautiful cookies, and when you have access to all of the amazing wildflowers that some west coast chefs do, take advantage!

    [ad_2]

    Sarah Johns

    Source link

  • What if Super Mario Bros. Wonder’s talking flowers were in Alan Wake 2?

    What if Super Mario Bros. Wonder’s talking flowers were in Alan Wake 2?

    [ad_1]

    Alan Wake 2 is bleak stuff. Sure, your flashlight makes the darkness a little less scary, and the full-motion video commercials are a lighthearted wink to players who seek them out. But for some, the game could benefit from a constant positive presence to raise the mood while you traverse the Overlap and beyond.

    Of course, this thought comes after playing Super Mario Bros. Wonder, where each level features a goofy talking flower character who remarks on the player’s actions, or on what’s happening in the game world. After going back and forth between the two games, it’s hard not to imagine what the talking flower would be like in Alan Wake 2.

    Image composition: Cameron Faulkner/Polygon | Source images: Remedy Entertainment/Epic Games Publishing, Nintendo EPD/Nintendo

    Beyond blurting out quips to take your mind off the dread of walking through forests at night with scarily few bullets, or when running from the Dark Presence, the talking flower could be a useful tool for marking objectives, or helping you figure out combinations to safes.

    Inevitably, I think the game would take a dark turn with this, turning the talking flower into a deceptive plot device. Eventually you wouldn’t know if you could trust what the talking flower is telling you, adding to Alan Wake 2’s deft skill of extending its dark fiction over the game’s reality. Are the Taken a threat, or are you the threat? Maybe, just maybe, it’s the talking flower.


    It’s putting thoughts into my mind, ones that I’d rather not be having.

    The chaos is reminding me of how simple things were, back when Alice and I first arrived in Bright Falls. Now, I’m stuck in the Dark Place.

    T̶̘͉̯̀̾̑̈́̈́͑̏̚̕͝h̸̝͔̭̹͎̲̦̖͉͓̊͊̒̓̎͒̑̚͜e̶̢̛̦̠̤̳͍̭̠̠͊̄̑̓̌̂̍̐̍͝ ̵͈͚̞̑͛̀̈́̅ţ̶̧̭̜̙̥̀̐̔͜ă̶̲̬̞͔̠͚̪̣̤̎̀̂̈́̕ḽ̸̬̬͎͙̥̘̈͐͗͋͋͋̍̌̀͛̕̕͠k̸̖͎̙̭̖̝̎̽̃̀͊̃̏̑̾̃͒ḭ̶̧̠͙͕̺͎͊̄̈́̾̇̈̐͋̏͘͝ń̸̢̮̩̰͙͌̆͛g̴̞͖͖͉̭͚̞͋́̒̈̃̄̾͗͂̈̎͘̚ ̵̢͎̺͎̙̭͕̹̞̑̆̈́̿f̴̨̨̧̱͖̫̱̥̖̩̝̯͇̪̀͋̒͐͗̓̎͗̂͐͜͠ĺ̸̡̦̼̖̦͔̗̳̭̫̼̳̘̱̝̎̂͛́̀̓̇̈̎͝o̷̡͓̭̞̲̯̞̘͊̈́̉͋̾̿̓̔̈̅͌͜͝ͅw̴̘͖̉̈́̽͗̏̈́̄̈́̓̈́̓̕͠ȩ̸̡̞̱̟̺̹̲͍͖̹̹̀̈́͒̆̀̊̾̉̑̽̑̕͠ͅŗ̷͉̝̘͚͉̱̫̰̈́ ̸̺̥̤̞̭͙̗͚͍̗̺͈͔̣̃͜͠ḩ̴̡̧̰͕͈̩̱̲̯͚̥͚̦́̇͜a̶̜̰̝̼̬̦̼͓͊̉̈́ṡ̸̡̟̩͎̗̘̭͕͕͍͍͖̠͜ ̵̗̬͉̜̩̂t̵̹͓͍̯̤̭͍̻̹̟͚̎͐͛͠ą̵̟̠̬̮̌̊̍̿̒̂̊͌͋̐̚͝k̶̨̛̝̻̫͕͇̙̼͎̞͕͓̥͒͂̔̽̀̑͒̏̚͜͝ȩ̴̝͓̬̝̘̘̙̤̰̫̞̤̈̎̏̐̒̋̏͋͊͝n̸̢̛̠̖͚̠͎͆̂͛̑́͠ͅ ̵̢̘̹͓͖̘̽͛̀͋̐̚m̵̛͚̊̃͂̃̆̋̓̂͛͆̋̎̃͌y̴̙͖͔̳͍͍̟̫̩͎̙̟̔͛̔̏̓̇̀̈́͆̀ͅͅͅ ̶̠͓̝͉̬̤̟̼̞͉͚͋̇̂͗́ͅp̴̨̞̲̹̩̙̫̖͉̩̠̗̜̀͜l̷̲͚̱͉͓̥̪͑̓̔͛̿̐͋͑͂̈́͘͜ã̸̢͚͓͚͔͊̓̒̈̎̆̾̎̚ç̶̟̤̟̯̘̖̝̫͎̣̹̚e̸̜͓̯͐̑̾̈́̂̉̓̆̐͝ ̶̙̖̲̮̏͌͜ͅí̸̯̇̇̇̆̄̔͋͊̾̋͠n̵̨̠̙̟͎̏́̄̓̔͗̀̚͝͝ ̶̜̞̥̭̰̼̖̞̖̭̈̂͒͒̓͑͛̾̐̽̿̕̕͝͝ŗ̴̮̜̼̔͗͋̉ͅę̷͍̥͖̞̻̗͓͓̥̎̅͑̅̾̓̾̃̿̄̕͠ä̸̛̻̎̅̔̈̈́̅̀̎̂̈́̚͝͝ļ̷͕̫̫̜̄̉́̎̐͝į̷͎͇̖̖͚̍̓̀̉̂́̏͂͑̂͌̕ͅt̷̡͉͎͓̻͙̩͍̙͈͋̏̈̏̎̉̀̕y̵͙͉̩̘̐̈́̃̄́̉̓̍̀̂̅̔͝.̵̢̡̢̭̻̝̭͎͔͖̻͔̓̀͜͜͠ͅ

    [ad_2]

    Cameron Faulkner

    Source link

  • 20 Classic Fragrances That Include Kate Middleton’s Favorite Flower

    20 Classic Fragrances That Include Kate Middleton’s Favorite Flower

    [ad_1]

    Slightly sweet and softly floral, lily of the valley has been a mainstay fragrance note for decades. A favorite scent of Christian Dior, it gained popularity in the 1950s thanks to the house’s Diorissimo scent. Today, notes of the flower can still be detected in a number of Dior’s most-loved fragrances (some of which are among the most popular perfumes of all time).

    Like many trends first set by Christian Dior, the floral scent’s popularity endures to this day. “[Lily of the valley] evokes a day of simple pleasure, much like the first warm spring day,” says Steve Mormoris, CEO and founder of Scent Beauty.

    [ad_2]

    Lindy Segal

    Source link