Many species of perennials, especially popular biennials (garden bells, gailardias, bearded carnations) are hard to find in gardening points.The only way to get them is to sow the seeds yourself.
Obtaining many species by yourself often becomes the easiest way to obtain a large number of plants necessary to create a spectacular effect of abundance. Seeds of biennialsand perennials that will not bloom
next year, sown from June to August in boxes or on a seedbed.
Plants sown at this date will have time to produce leaf rosettes, which, after transplanting to a permanent place in autumn, will take root hard enough to survive the winter.To be sure, however, it is worth covering the young plants lightly, especially when the winter is snowless.If we do not remove all the inflorescences after flowering,
in the following years, many species recover spontaneously.