Fast Growing Flowers – Learn About Flowers That Bloom Quickly
Part of gardening is learning patience. Your landscape vision will not occur overnight, no matter how hard you may wish for it to be finished. Plants take time to grow and fill in, so instant gratification is not a hallmark of gardening. However, fast growing flowers can give you that much needed boost of landscaping satisfaction while you wait for other parts of the garden to mature.
Fast Flowers for Gardens
Flowers that bloom quickly are the fastest way to put a smile on a gardener's face. If you have a new garden bed, waiting for everything to arise in spring can be a clock watching game. Instead, plant quick growing flowers that give you beauty and fragrance with little waiting.
Flowers that grow fast bring their color and form to decorate any part of the garden. The fastest flowers come from seed and are easy to plant and grow. Soon, you will have a cutting garden for constant bouquets of fresh flowers in your home. You want quick growing flowers that produce consistently if you are a fan of fresh blooms indoors.
Also, flowers that grow fast help your veggie and fruit crops as they feed and attract pollinators. While you enjoy the blooms and your crops, the hummingbirds will also delight you with their quick, charming manner.
Selecting Flowers That Grow Fast
Fast growing flowers that are annuals should produce blooms within two months from seed. Seed that germinates quickly is not a good indicator of when the plant will bloom. Take zinnia, for instance. It will germinate within days but not bloom for up to 75 days.
For fast blooming plants, make sure you follow all the seed packet info as to seed planting depth, light, heat, time of sowing, and care. To really speed things up, plant indoors six to eight weeks before the date of your last frost. Harden off the little plants and install them in prepared beds. You will get quicker blooms in this manner.
You might also try perennials for annual flowering reliance, but many of these don't flower until the plant is several years old. That means purchasing mature plants or waiting patiently for a few seasons.
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Annual seeds produce flowers that bloom quickly. Their job is to come and go, but make a lot of flowers and seeds before winter kill happens. Since this is their nature, we can take advantage of all the flowers for our own enjoyment and, in many cases, trust they will come up again the next year if we let some blooms go to seed.
Annual prolific bloomers to try:
Bonnie Grant is a professional landscaper with a Certification in Urban Gardening. She has been gardening and writing for 15 years. A former professional chef, she has a passion for edible landscaping.
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