Imagine a garden of 450 square meters with a flowering period from early spring to fall. Let's try, its borders have several assumptions of strategic ornamental importance. Each of them blooms at a different time of the year (for example, all plantings are shown in the flowering phase).
There are several resting places in the garden that will allow you to admire the effects of our work from different perspectives. Thanks to this map, each of us can create a truly gardening work that will delight with its view all year round.
Pink and white flowering peonies reign in the perennial garden from May to June. In this assumption, they are accompanied by decorative Endress' geraniums with pink flowers, yellow algae and purple flowering eagles. After the peonies have faded, the role of the leading ornamental plants is taken over by the algae, extremely valuable for the arrangement due to their nice, velvety leaves. Eagles are very expansive, so in order to keep them in check, flower shoots should be trimmed before mature seeds appear on them. It is worth adding that the eagles are suitable for vase bouquets. The flowers have a hook-shaped spur.
Bergenia is one of the early flowering perennials.Under favorable weather conditions, e.g. after a mild winter, its pink flowers appear in March, at the latest in April. Bergenia has shiny, leathery evergreen leaves that change color nicely in winter. On the map, these charming perennials are accompanied by the golden spur, brunner (has tiny blue flowers) and geranium (flowers stained dark pink).
Purple foxglove, in both white and pink flowers, is irreplaceable in any part of the garden. This short-lived perennial blooms in June. Since September, the blue-flowering monkshood Arendsa and the white-flowering common cohosh take over the role of the main ornamental plants. Lungwort is used as a ground cover plant.
The whorl is distinguished from other summer perennials with very long flowering. Its flowers begin to appear in June and last until September.Long flowering is also characterized by mossy sage and catnip (both with purple flowers), yarrow (yellow flowers) and paniculate flame (pink flowers). If sage, catnip and flame are to re-bloom in our garden, their shoots should be trimmed right after flowering.
Echinacea and rudbeckia bloom during the summer and autumn solstices. Shortly thereafter, the various species of purple asters and the sedum plant bloom. Plants that will be perfect in the company of these wonderful perennials, you can choose mulberry and osteon. The most famous species of Stipa are Jan Stipa joannis and Stipa Stipa S. capillata.