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Creating an Annual Flower Bed
Annual flower beds are a beautiful site to see. Since most
annual flowers are quite colorful, they're planted into beds where
color is most desired or needed. Used for a wide variety of exterior
landscaping and garden design purposes, annual flowers come in every
color of the rainbow and they can have any number of textures and
shapes too.
Annuals are also popular because they're versatile. In other
words: You don't have to make a long term gardening commitment to
them. If you'd simply like to try various flower colors and
arrangements around your home and lawn, you can put in annual flower
beds whose designs change every year.
Creating an annual flower bed can be quite easy too. They range from
the quick and simple to the more elaborate and established
varieties. If for instance, you want a quick and easy annual
flower bed, then you'd simply pick out a spot in your yard and
get started with planting it. You could add a bed border later, or
just not put a border on it at all so that the area is easily
acclimated back into the rest of the yard next season.
If you know for sure you'll want a garden bed in a specific place
for many years to come of course, then you might choose to create
a raised bed instead. Even raised beds are quite versatile when
used for planting annuals though, because while the location may
stay the same, you'll be able to try out many different types of
flowers as often as you'd like.
Quite possibly the most difficult decision you'll need to make when
creating annual flower beds, is to choose which flowers to grow this
year. Since annuals come in so many different varieties, colors,
shapes, sizes, and textures, you may be tempted to simply plant an
eclectic bunch of mismatched everything. And if you like the
eclectic style, that's of course perfectly fine to do.
When planting a wide variety of annual flowers, there are of course
several guidelines you should follow to get the best results.
First and foremost you'll need to make sure each of the annual
plants you've chosen can grow in the flower bed you intend to put
them in. You won't have much luck if you try to mix shade plants
with sun lovers for instance.
The other thing you'll need to know is how large the annual
flowers will grow throughout the season. If you plant a little
bit of everything randomly in your flower bed, you may find yourself
with something of a mess in about a month or two. If you have tall
flowers growing in the front of your bed for instance, and little
bitty ground covers flowering in the back, you won't see those
flowering ground covers well at all because the tall plants will
obscure them from site.
So a basic rule of thumb for flower bed gardening is to put
the taller plants in the back, and plant successively shorter ones
in front of them. Repeat this with each plant size, until you have
the shortest, smallest, or trailing plants at the very front of your
garden bed. Then when everything is matured and blooming nicely,
you'll be able to enjoy the full variations of colors, textures, and
groupings in your annual flower bed.
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