What an amazing backdrop your farm has! Those mountains in the background with the hovering storm clouds look so atmospheric. Another good video. Thank you 😊
I’m pretty new to gardening so eager to learn and I’m so thrilled I found this channel. I started following gif your rose advise but very happy to find you focus on different things too. I am going to add the plants on this video to search their heights and see where I can fit them in my small garden. I’m running out of space already 😆 thank you! 🙏
4:00 Holy cow your backdrop is so damn beautiful! So lucky to live there! I wish someday I can just live in a nice secluded place with a view like that!
Beautiful choices. I’m adding some hardy salvias this year that are almost shrubby and have flowers that hopefully the hummingbirds will love. They should do great in a dryer, sunny spot.
Try Salvia Anthony Parker. I'm from Sydney and it didn't go dormant or die in winter (no snow though). It's very hardy and too easy to propagate. It attracts bees too together with my African blue basil, both hard, I didn't see hummingbirds though but them living outside balcony, not bad. It blooms in autumn to winter, it's autumn now and it's stunning.
I have all these perennials but the fern bleeding heart and must find that one. Grew hyssop from seed which is Sangria, Peach pink color. Love it! Thanks for showing these wonderful perennials!
I also wanted to thank you for sharing your knowledge with us. Your recommendation 4 parts milk 6 parts water solution saved about 10 of my tomato plants! And I grew them from seed. I lost another 10 or so to fungus before I tried your solution due to my inability to read what’s on the package in front of me lol🤦♀️ I changed the soil and removed all the soil, soaked tomato plant roots in that solution, planted in new better soil mix and now my tomatoes are healthy and thriving and are growing like crazy. Also your powder chitosan plus baking soda (the potassium one) for fungus is fantastic and has helped with my roses already. If you ever are able to sell your roses to the US I will be the first one to buy them:-) THANK YOU!
Let me also mention geraniums and vinca major, these are probably suited better for warmer climates but they're amazing. They both bloom all season long, here in Greece they both bloom from early spring till mid fall, they are completely disease and pest resistant, they can get as big as you want them to, they bloom heavily all year, and also geraniums are drought tolerant
Thanks so much. Geraniums were on my "runners up" list, and I only left it off because I don't grow a lot of them myself (which is something I should address!).
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I'm in zone 6b/7a and have found they grow best for me in morning sun or dappled sun. Just wanted to mention in case you add some this season.
I’ve just read the second part of your post. Of course, geraniums are not as luxuriant here as in the south and certainly don’t perform in the winter. We mostly grow them in containers and take them into a greenhouse during cold months
I’m a big fan of hardy geraniums but not vinca major. In my 7a Utah garden, one plant jumped from a potted plant on the deck and into the front yard, where it smothered everything in its shady path. I tried weed whacking it and used a broadleaf killer, but it has superior genes and outwitted me. Digging it out has been my exercise for 2 yrs now. Love the blue flowers in spring, hate the spreading and suffocating vines.
One of the primary reasons to have perennials is they are an anchor feature type of plant much like roses, shrubs, and trees. They provide long reaching features that allow you accent with the annuals of your choice for added variety and yet maintain a certain amount of familiar feel to any space. I'm quite impressed by the amount of new variations which clearly brings them much more into the mix with annuals. The coconut daisy is one that I just might have to look into as a pollinators attractor. Surprisingly, the Lavender Angel Face rose (my newest addition) is the first to bud and flower. It is more pink than purple in the color spectrum, but definitely the most aromatic "Rose" scent of all my roses including Don Juan and Mr. Lincoln.
Thanks. Those lavender and mauve roses are so variable. You're right - very often they skew to pink, but sometimes more towards brown (like Distant Drums) or just grey. Lovely, and often well-scented, but not always predictable.
I grow most of these in my gardens except the fern leaf bleeding hearts!! i’m going to have to find some this year. Thanks for another wonderful and helpful video!
Greatly impressed by your content, “to the point, just the facts,” information and your fine use of language keeps my interest. Wanted to add perennial Sweet Williams to the list. They’re so easy to maintain, are not invasive, bloom relatively long, have such stunning colours and a wonderful fragrance. Couldn’t imagine my garden without them.
Jason, Wow enjoyed seeing all those colorful flowers me and roses don't get along. Highly allergic to them. I finally getting my association to dig out my two pricker bushes. Have to get two bushes I have to buy. Zone 6. One gets morning sun then bright shade. The other gets afternoon sun and then evening sun depends on the trees. Thanks for a different kind of show
I've had Madonna for a few years and she's GORGEOUS! She stays short and grows beautifully round and the flowers grow tightly together. My neighbors always ask what species it is and they think I'm joking because I ADORE pop singer Madonna!
The voles will eat your orange butterfly perennial. I just could not keep me in the garden. I do love bee balm and have had great success with them in the ground and in pots. Jack Frost is so lovely in the garden, as he says the foliage is wonderful. Shasta Daisy is so classic. I love the sedums. Blue Fortune is a go to and I never had the deer go near it. Very hardy. And how can you not have many heuchera in your yard. Both in pots and in the ground. Great video… thanks.
Thanks for this! I have the Jack Frost, but didn't know what it was until now. I'm going to buy more since I love those little blue flowers. The foliage is already coming up.
This is a great list! Thanks Jason! I started some Geum from seed last year. Hopefully they’ll flower this season 🤞. And I just got some bleeding hearts, the standard type. Sounds like the fern leaf variety would be better in our dry summers. A lot of these would be great in my new cottage garden. Thanks again!
Thanks for the tip. I'm not totally shocked to hear about another member of the mint family being used in cooking, but I didn't know about agastache as a replacement for tarragon.
Love those sedum and I need to try that variety of Bleeding Heart - always the downside with my old fashioned Spectabilis, the short bloom time then they disappear!! thanks for sharing
Jason, thanks for the list. Over the winter I decided I wasn't buying any more annuals. Can you make a list of 10-12 additional perennials like your current list? This was extremely helpful.
Nice. I also had these videos: ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html and even ruclips.net/video/g-siKEX_wok/видео.html these lists aren't 100% perennial, but lean pretty heavy in that direction.
A client of mine hD a white dicentra that holds its foliage for months. The standard pink dicentra only lasts a few weeks, but this white dicentra is apparent and attractive, in the fall.
Have been growing Jack frost plant with little luck, twice they were attacked by bugs ,and the last time I tried baking soda and it also kill the plant, am going for container this time around
Loved this - such great choices!! I planted fernleaf dicentra (Pink Diamonds) a couple of years ago and it is definitely a favourite that I plan to add more of. Agastache is one perennial that I can't believe I don't yet have in the garden but unlike the Geum (that I also don't have but wasn't even aware that they were a hardy perennial here until recently), I've been meaning to add Agastache for a long time. This year, though, I'm going all in & growing 5 varieties from seed, which I just sowed last week - now for the nail-biting wait to see how many of them actually germinate!
Great video on perennials - which I love them.please tell us more kinds of perrentials for 8:07 -- especially groundcovers cause of our hail that we might get .I subscribed so u can tell us more about when to prune - stake - feed etc perrentials .. thanks .
Jason, who do you do with perennials at the end of the season? Harvest the seeds? Cut them back? Do you replant the seeds? What do you do? Thank you Jason.
There's only a few I collect seeds from - trollius, belamcanda. I could do more, but I'm always chopping for new varieties too. Other than that, not much. I usually wait to cut them down in the spring.
Great choices. I am putting in many of these. I am also starting some Turkish sage (Phlomis russeliana) and the seedings look strong with great germination. I just love how the tiered look and really want to see if the seed heads last into autumn/winter.
Agastache are great, I've had the white form in my own garden which was a prolific seeder and also the blue form where I work. I've got to say, in my experience, the mature plants don't last past two to three years. Best treated as a biennial. The blue form didn't seem to produce any seed at all.
Thanks for sharing your experience. My 'Blue Fortune' are reliably perennial over 10 years now, but I'm sure there's some variability in cultivars and conditions.
Thanks again Jason, really helpful. Side note: I watch another RUclipsr, Dr. Michael Rowe, he's a chiropractor, who looks like he could be your brother and the way he talks has a similar cadence to you. Just a little fun fact. Take care.
There are two types of nepeta that used to be widely available but are now harder to find. I had tons of 'Dawn to Dusk" which is pink. I used to grow it with Rose Morden Blush. The other fantastic one is 'Snowflake' a short cultivar that attracts tons of bees and is a dynamite ground cover. It surrounds other plants without disturbing them, which is very unusual. So no weeds invade the plants. It's more readily available.
Can you share in a videos(s) how "cut back properly" means for these varieties? I deadhead everything (unless I'm producing seed) but I know that there are some plants that need to be cut back harder after blooming. Thanks for all the knowledge that you share. I started a bunch of perennials from seed this year, fingers crossed that I can keep the squirrels from digging them up &/or keep the rabbits from eating them.
I have (had) all of them Agastache and Catmint I love, my cats are only attracted to one kind of Nepeta and I can't remember which one ;-) I loved my Geum double petals, but when they reseed they seem to regress to the "normal "one, I might have pricked out the wrong plant thinking it was a seedling :-( Great video and plant, I recommend them all too
Shasta daisies never rebloom for me here on Van Island :( It will bloom late June to July then that's it. Just new growth at the base that never really grows more until next spring. I think reblooms of shastas are typically just in the southern US :( It probably doesn't stay hot enough up here for it to do it :( Still love it though as it is very reliable.
Great video!! The only thing that stinks about perennials... is that I don't have more garden space for them 😂 I do have a related question - What kind of smaller perennials might you recommend for a dry, full sun spot by our mailbox? (NJ Zone 7a) Only have about 2 square feet to play with. Ideally, something I don't have to keep standing out there to hand water every day during hot, humid summers (aside from babying the season getting established.) Bonus, but not required, would be winter interest. 🙂 Maybe Sedum? Anything else jump to mind? Thanks for all your awesome content!
@FraserValleyRoseFarm sounds great, do you guys accept visitors ever? I am new gardener hobbyist from USA I just started this year with roses and other flowers but something about Roses they are just so lovely with all the amazing color, you know they even change color sometimes when they are just blooming to the open bud it's incredible and they just keep blooming and over every month new blooms. I am just addicted and I am really enjoying your content. Thank you for everything!
Do sedums like Autumn Joy propagate well from cuttings? It looks like I could divide them, but I want big patches of them! I have Autumn Joy and two similar varieties -one variegated and one with dark foliage.
Yes, fairly easily from cuttings - I'm making a video now on sedum cuttings, mainly with the finer-stemmed varieties, but the method is the same either way.
I'm going to have to try some catmint! I went to my garden to check, and my Jack Frost is already in bloom! It stays in bloom so long as it is; I had no idea it would rebloom if I cut it back. When do you recommend it be cut back? I'm in approx your zone, in Burnaby.
My yard is mostly deep shade, but I want to build a circle perrenial garden in the one small area that gets mostly sun. My idea is to go from tall in the middle to shorter around the outside and have something in bloom throughout the summer. Can you suggest what perrenials would work well together or point me to a research source to help me get started. I live in SW Michigan. Thank you so much. - Deb
TBH I'd probably use ChatGPT to get a list of tall, medium and compact perennials that are good for your hardiness zone and sun exposure. It's it a good way to get a starting point and you can also ask clarifying question to narrow in on the colors & other requirements. Of course the list in the video are mostly for full sun/part shade as well (except maybe for the heuchera).
I think it's powdery mildew that's usually the culprit - and mainly it's just looking for varieties that have some resistance. It won't prevent the problem altogether, but keeps it manageable. Regular watering also reduces the risk.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks. You’re correct as I used the wrong Terminology. Actually I thought it’s the opposite i.e. I try to prevent the water from splashing on the leaves. The last Type I actually got rid of because I did not want the nearby plants to be affected so I’ve given up on these type of plants for now. 🙂
I live in zone 7. Would like to have perennials from either small plants or seeds. I put leaves in an area last fall so I can have a flower garden. Any suggestions or will most of your flowers on this video work? Thanks Mary
Yes, these are good picks. I also have some recommendations here ruclips.net/video/gwnOZLMmaK0/видео.html and here: ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html
I would like to help the Monarch butterflies, but I have found milkweed of any type to be enormously invasive --- so I purged it from my garden. Is there a variety that behaves itself?
Thank you for the timely top tip Jason! I've always loved the look of Nepeta but always stayed awayed as I was afraid they might attract cats in the neighborhood. Could you please share if you've had any cat issues with nepeta?
No, I haven't. I think this may be one of those times that the common name is a bit too general. Nepeta cataria is catnip, but that's just the one species. My own experience (and what I've heard from a number of other gardeners) is that there's been no issues with "pest cats" on the ornamental cousins. YMMV
I was never that impressed by agastaches; bit boring nondescript blues. But bought some agastache blackadder a couple of years ago and it has real impact. Beautiful colour that blends well with everything.
They say that deer don't love minty plants (like the catmint or agastache) but other gardeners remind me that deer will eat most anything depending on whether or not they can find something they prefer.
Thanks. Powdery mildew is definitely one of its vulnerabilities. That can be varietal - 'Jacob Cline' is an older variety that shows some resistance, and they're still trying to manage it by breeding resistance into new cultivars. I also have enjoyed M. punctata which is a bit wilder looking, but gorgeous mauve and spotted flowers - not too much in the way of mildew.
Perennials are the best! Can't get enough of them.
What an amazing backdrop your farm has! Those mountains in the background with the hovering storm clouds look so atmospheric. Another good video. Thank you 😊
Thank you Jason, I have all of the ones you mentioned. I don’t cut any of them back but I’m going to start. 🌷💚🙃
I’m pretty new to gardening so eager to learn and I’m so thrilled I found this channel. I started following gif your rose advise but very happy to find you focus on different things too. I am going to add the plants on this video to search their heights and see where I can fit them in my small garden. I’m running out of space already 😆 thank you! 🙏
Thanks Paulina
Timely! I'm all about perennials. This time of year the native plant sales are my go to. Thank you!
4:00 Holy cow your backdrop is so damn beautiful! So lucky to live there! I wish someday I can just live in a nice secluded place with a view like that!
Thanks so much. It my one good gardening trick - keep people looking up and around so that they won't notice the weeds.
I love the recommendation. The mountains and clouds look beautiful.
Thanks Norine!
Beautiful choices. I’m adding some hardy salvias this year that are almost shrubby and have flowers that hopefully the hummingbirds will love. They should do great in a dryer, sunny spot.
Try Salvia Anthony Parker. I'm from Sydney and it didn't go dormant or die in winter (no snow though). It's very hardy and too easy to propagate. It attracts bees too together with my African blue basil, both hard, I didn't see hummingbirds though but them living outside balcony, not bad. It blooms in autumn to winter, it's autumn now and it's stunning.
@@eckehareckbert2731 beautiful! It would be an annual for me, but I’ll keep an eye out for it at nurseries or maybe I can track down seed 🙂
@@emkn1479 yup, have a great day
I have all these perennials but the fern bleeding heart and must find that one. Grew hyssop from seed which is Sangria, Peach pink color. Love it! Thanks for showing these wonderful perennials!
My agastache "blue fortune" blooms forever and the bees LOVE it.
After watching you last year I ordered 2 David Austin roses!!!! Wish me luck! Zone 6b
Great content, thank you.
Fern leaves bleeding heart work really well in Vancouver, sun or shade 😊
Me too! What a great list of tough perennials! I actually have several including “coconut “ Daisy.
I think you’re amazing in every way!
I also wanted to thank you for sharing your knowledge with us. Your recommendation 4 parts milk 6 parts water solution saved about 10 of my tomato plants! And I grew them from seed. I lost another 10 or so to fungus before I tried your solution due to my inability to read what’s on the package in front of me lol🤦♀️
I changed the soil and removed all the soil, soaked tomato plant roots in that solution, planted in new better soil mix and now my tomatoes are healthy and thriving and are growing like crazy. Also your powder chitosan plus baking soda (the potassium one) for fungus is fantastic and has helped with my roses already. If you ever are able to sell your roses to the US I will be the first one to buy them:-) THANK YOU!
I just found your videos, but I am so happy I did! Thank you for them!!!😊
Thank you for this!!! Looking good, Jason!
Great video! Great timing! Thanks for all the info and choices, Jason!
A great video, some advises I certainly will take to consideration this garden season. Thank you
Great line up.
Let me also mention geraniums and vinca major, these are probably suited better for warmer climates but they're amazing.
They both bloom all season long, here in Greece they both bloom from early spring till mid fall, they are completely disease and pest resistant, they can get as big as you want them to, they bloom heavily all year, and also geraniums are drought tolerant
Thanks so much. Geraniums were on my "runners up" list, and I only left it off because I don't grow a lot of them myself (which is something I should address!).
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I'm in zone 6b/7a and have found they grow best for me in morning sun or dappled sun. Just wanted to mention in case you add some this season.
The different types of geranium and vinca also do well in the UK, at least here in the south, so they don’t need a Mediterranean climate.
I’ve just read the second part of your post. Of course, geraniums are not as luxuriant here as in the south and certainly don’t perform in the winter. We mostly grow them in containers and take them into a greenhouse during cold months
I’m a big fan of hardy geraniums but not vinca major. In my 7a Utah garden, one plant jumped from a potted plant on the deck and into the front yard, where it smothered everything in its shady path. I tried weed whacking it and used a broadleaf killer, but it has superior genes and outwitted me. Digging it out has been my exercise for 2 yrs now. Love the blue flowers in spring, hate the spreading and suffocating vines.
Nice picks!! Definitely wrote a few down! Thank you!
You're very welcome. Thanks for watching
Heuchera's have come a long way since my grandma's heuchera!
Thanks Jason 🌼
One of the primary reasons to have perennials is they are an anchor feature type of plant much like roses, shrubs, and trees. They provide long reaching features that allow you accent with the annuals of your choice for added variety and yet maintain a certain amount of familiar feel to any space. I'm quite impressed by the amount of new variations which clearly brings them much more into the mix with annuals.
The coconut daisy is one that I just might have to look into as a pollinators attractor.
Surprisingly, the Lavender Angel Face rose (my newest addition) is the first to bud and flower. It is more pink than purple in the color spectrum, but definitely the most aromatic "Rose" scent of all my roses including Don Juan and Mr. Lincoln.
Thanks. Those lavender and mauve roses are so variable. You're right - very often they skew to pink, but sometimes more towards brown (like Distant Drums) or just grey. Lovely, and often well-scented, but not always predictable.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm The reason for anticipation.🤙
some great choices there, thx Jason! I will have to try cutting back my monarda to get more blooms, didn't know I could do that.
I grow most of these in my gardens except the fern leaf bleeding hearts!! i’m going to have to find some this year. Thanks for another wonderful and helpful video!
GREAT list Jason. Thanks
Greatly impressed by your content, “to the point, just the facts,” information and your fine use of language keeps my interest. Wanted to add perennial Sweet Williams to the list. They’re so easy to maintain, are not invasive, bloom relatively long, have such stunning colours and a wonderful fragrance. Couldn’t imagine my garden without them.
Thanks!
Thanks
Great list love the pinky agastache
Jason,
Wow enjoyed seeing all those colorful flowers me and roses don't get along. Highly allergic to them. I finally getting my association to dig out my two pricker bushes. Have to get two bushes I have to buy. Zone 6. One gets morning sun then bright shade. The other gets afternoon sun and then evening sun depends on the trees. Thanks for a different kind of show
good sharing
I’m in total agreement here! I have all but the monarda & adding this year!
I have monarda in my garden and i love it
I've had Madonna for a few years and she's GORGEOUS! She stays short and grows beautifully round and the flowers grow tightly together. My neighbors always ask what species it is and they think I'm joking because I ADORE pop singer Madonna!
The voles will eat your orange butterfly perennial. I just could not keep me in the garden. I do love bee balm and have had great success with them in the ground and in pots. Jack Frost is so lovely in the garden, as he says the foliage is wonderful. Shasta Daisy is so classic. I love the sedums. Blue Fortune is a go to and I never had the deer go near it. Very hardy. And how can you not have many heuchera in your yard. Both in pots and in the ground. Great video… thanks.
Thanks for this! I have the Jack Frost, but didn't know what it was until now. I'm going to buy more since I love those little blue flowers. The foliage is already coming up.
Great video
This is a great list! Thanks Jason!
I started some Geum from seed last year. Hopefully they’ll flower this season 🤞. And I just got some bleeding hearts, the standard type. Sounds like the fern leaf variety would be better in our dry summers.
A lot of these would be great in my new cottage garden. Thanks again!
Thanks Kate. I love your direction of mixing ornamentals, fruit and veggie plants - kinda silly at times when gardeners rigidly segregate them
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks! Now I just have to figure out how I’m going to do it 😂
Loved it.
Agastache can be used in place of taragon in cooking. Taragon is not as cold hardy for the northern climates its a good choice !
Thanks for the tip. I'm not totally shocked to hear about another member of the mint family being used in cooking, but I didn't know about agastache as a replacement for tarragon.
Great informational video without any rambling, thank you! Any perennial suggestions in front of a hedge of phantom hydrangeas?
Thanks Rachel. Totally depends on your tastes. If you have the soil moisture for it astilbe can be quite nice with hydrangea.
Thanks! I think it could work out but my concern is the height of the astilbe? The hydrangeas have huge heads and flop.
Great info. Subscribed and liked.
Great video! I’ve gotta look up Agastache
Great video!!!!! 🎉
Great list! I need to try geum. My favorite, hardy geranium, is another perennial that blooms all season.
Great pick. If I had a few to show I would have put it on the list
Nice video.
Perfect time to come to this video! Hey! Starting an indoor green house , just subbed
Nice! So exciting
Love those sedum and I need to try that variety of Bleeding Heart - always the downside with my old fashioned Spectabilis, the short bloom time then they disappear!! thanks for sharing
Jason, thanks for the list. Over the winter I decided I wasn't buying any more annuals. Can you make a list of 10-12 additional perennials like your current list? This was extremely helpful.
Nice. I also had these videos: ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html and even ruclips.net/video/g-siKEX_wok/видео.html these lists aren't 100% perennial, but lean pretty heavy in that direction.
I learned so much from you today. Thanks :)
I'm so glad. Thanks Michele
A client of mine hD a white dicentra that holds its foliage for months. The standard pink dicentra only lasts a few weeks, but this white dicentra is apparent and attractive, in the fall.
Thank You!
Have been growing Jack frost plant with little luck, twice they were attacked by bugs ,and the last time I tried baking soda and it also kill the plant, am going for container this time around
Thank you
Montauk Daisy...I mean, it's a daisy that starts to bloom IN SEPTEMBER!!! What's not to love?
Loved this - such great choices!! I planted fernleaf dicentra (Pink Diamonds) a couple of years ago and it is definitely a favourite that I plan to add more of. Agastache is one perennial that I can't believe I don't yet have in the garden but unlike the Geum (that I also don't have but wasn't even aware that they were a hardy perennial here until recently), I've been meaning to add Agastache for a long time. This year, though, I'm going all in & growing 5 varieties from seed, which I just sowed last week - now for the nail-biting wait to see how many of them actually germinate!
Thanks Margaret. I'll cross my fingers for good germination. They're pretty fast from seed!
Great video on perennials - which I love them.please tell us more kinds of perrentials for 8:07 -- especially groundcovers cause of our hail that we might get .I subscribed so u can tell us more about when to prune - stake - feed etc perrentials .. thanks .
Thank you, great info.
I also love geranium “Roseanne”!
Great pick! Incredible bloom period
Heuchera are so underrated!
Jason, who do you do with perennials at the end of the season?
Harvest the seeds? Cut them back? Do you replant the seeds? What do you do?
Thank you Jason.
There's only a few I collect seeds from - trollius, belamcanda. I could do more, but I'm always chopping for new varieties too. Other than that, not much. I usually wait to cut them down in the spring.
Thank you Jason
Great choices. I am putting in many of these. I am also starting some Turkish sage (Phlomis russeliana) and the seedings look strong with great germination. I just love how the tiered look and really want to see if the seed heads last into autumn/winter.
Thanks Michele. That reminds me that I'll have to see where I planted my phlomis and whether it came back
Agastache are great, I've had the white form in my own garden which was a prolific seeder and also the blue form where I work. I've got to say, in my experience, the mature plants don't last past two to three years. Best treated as a biennial. The blue form didn't seem to produce any seed at all.
Thanks for sharing your experience. My 'Blue Fortune' are reliably perennial over 10 years now, but I'm sure there's some variability in cultivars and conditions.
Thanks again Jason, really helpful. Side note: I watch another RUclipsr, Dr. Michael Rowe, he's a chiropractor, who looks like he could be your brother and the way he talks has a similar cadence to you. Just a little fun fact. Take care.
Sold on the idea. Any suggestions for zone 6?
Thanks Mary - a good portion of these are rated to zone 6 or below (if the number is lower that's better because it'll withstand deeper cold)
May I ask what cultivar is seen at 5:20?
I'd plant that even if it didn't flower. Super cool stuff!
Sedum rupestre I believe. There's also a vigorous bright yellow cultivar in this group called 'Angelina'
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much!
Thank you for adding the latin names. Avoids lots of mistakes.
Jason, can you please give some suggestions for zone 9b and for a walkway edging?
How about Pratia 'County Park'
There are two types of nepeta that used to be widely available but are now harder to find. I had tons of 'Dawn to Dusk" which is pink. I used to grow it with Rose Morden Blush.
The other fantastic one is 'Snowflake' a short cultivar that attracts tons of bees and is a dynamite ground cover. It surrounds other plants without disturbing them, which is very unusual. So no weeds invade the plants. It's more readily available.
Thanks Donna.
Can you share in a videos(s) how "cut back properly" means for these varieties? I deadhead everything (unless I'm producing seed) but I know that there are some plants that need to be cut back harder after blooming. Thanks for all the knowledge that you share. I started a bunch of perennials from seed this year, fingers crossed that I can keep the squirrels from digging them up &/or keep the rabbits from eating them.
You bet - I have it on the list for later in the season when I'll have more examples to show.
I have (had) all of them Agastache and Catmint I love, my cats are only attracted to one kind of Nepeta and I can't remember which one ;-) I loved my Geum double petals, but when they reseed they seem to regress to the "normal "one, I might have pricked out the wrong plant thinking it was a seedling :-( Great video and plant, I recommend them all too
Shasta daisies never rebloom for me here on Van Island :( It will bloom late June to July then that's it. Just new growth at the base that never really grows more until next spring. I think reblooms of shastas are typically just in the southern US :( It probably doesn't stay hot enough up here for it to do it :( Still love it though as it is very reliable.
Would be nice to know which of these plants can take high summer temps & humidity.
Thanks. There's not such a straightforward rating system for summer heat and humidity as there is for winter hardiness - I wish!
Great video!! The only thing that stinks about perennials... is that I don't have more garden space for them 😂
I do have a related question - What kind of smaller perennials might you recommend for a dry, full sun spot by our mailbox? (NJ Zone 7a) Only have about 2 square feet to play with. Ideally, something I don't have to keep standing out there to hand water every day during hot, humid summers (aside from babying the season getting established.) Bonus, but not required, would be winter interest. 🙂 Maybe Sedum? Anything else jump to mind?
Thanks for all your awesome content!
Thanks so much. Maybe have a look at these picks: ruclips.net/video/cTMNH3fdGEg/видео.html
Wow, will bookmark this. Where are you located?
A little east of Vancouver BC on the way to Harrison Hot Springs
@FraserValleyRoseFarm sounds great, do you guys accept visitors ever? I am new gardener hobbyist from USA I just started this year with roses and other flowers but something about Roses they are just so lovely with all the amazing color, you know they even change color sometimes when they are just blooming to the open bud it's incredible and they just keep blooming and over every month new blooms. I am just addicted and I am really enjoying your content. Thank you for everything!
Yes, we're open Fridays and Saturdays through the growing season if you're ever in the area
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm sounds awesome I will if i am around
Great list... Thank you. Is it true that Agastachi is a short lived perinneal. Max of 2-3 years?
My 'Blue Fortune' has been one of the longest enduring perennials in the garden, but variety and climate can definitely make a difference
Any tips on mildew prevention on the monarda?
There are some new varieties with some resistance, but nothing completely immune.
Do sedums like Autumn Joy propagate well from cuttings? It looks like I could divide them, but I want big patches of them! I have Autumn Joy and two similar varieties -one variegated and one with dark foliage.
Yes, fairly easily from cuttings - I'm making a video now on sedum cuttings, mainly with the finer-stemmed varieties, but the method is the same either way.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Oh great! I’m looking forward to it. Thank you for your response! :-)
I'm going to have to try some catmint! I went to my garden to check, and my Jack Frost is already in bloom! It stays in bloom so long as it is; I had no idea it would rebloom if I cut it back. When do you recommend it be cut back? I'm in approx your zone, in Burnaby.
Whenever it looks tired and spent I give it a haircut.
My yard is mostly deep shade, but I want to build a circle perrenial garden in the one small area that gets mostly sun. My idea is to go from tall in the middle to shorter around the outside and have something in bloom throughout the summer. Can you suggest what perrenials would work well together or point me to a research source to help me get started. I live in SW Michigan.
Thank you so much.
- Deb
TBH I'd probably use ChatGPT to get a list of tall, medium and compact perennials that are good for your hardiness zone and sun exposure. It's it a good way to get a starting point and you can also ask clarifying question to narrow in on the colors & other requirements. Of course the list in the video are mostly for full sun/part shade as well (except maybe for the heuchera).
Great ideas! I would love to try asclepias, but I've read that they are toxic to handle and cause skin irritation. Have you found this?
I think I've read somewhere that the latex in the sap is irritating, but come to think of it it's never turned into an issue for me.
what is that lovely bush at the beginning please?
'Dawn' Viburnum
Love perennials… Do you ever trim dianthus so it doesn’t get leggy? I bought it last year but is now leggy…
Thanks Carole. Yes, I've found dianthus responds nicely to pruning for shape and size.
Great list. I just hope I can locate most of them locally here in W. PA. And by the way, have you lost weight recently?
Thanks Laurel. I've trimmed a bit for sure.
Hi Jason, how do you prevent downy mildew on the bee balm plants? 🌸🇨🇦
I think it's powdery mildew that's usually the culprit - and mainly it's just looking for varieties that have some resistance. It won't prevent the problem altogether, but keeps it manageable. Regular watering also reduces the risk.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks. You’re correct as I used the wrong Terminology. Actually I thought it’s the opposite i.e. I try to prevent the water from splashing on the leaves. The last Type I actually got rid of because I did not want the nearby plants to be affected so I’ve given up on these type of plants for now. 🙂
I live in zone 7. Would like to have perennials from either small plants or seeds. I put leaves in an area last fall so I can have a flower garden. Any suggestions or will most of your flowers on this video work? Thanks Mary
Yes, these are good picks. I also have some recommendations here ruclips.net/video/gwnOZLMmaK0/видео.html and here: ruclips.net/video/O2Hwm9W8j40/видео.html
I would like to help the Monarch butterflies, but I have found milkweed of any type to be enormously invasive --- so I purged it from my garden. Is there a variety that behaves itself?
Thanks Jim. I can't offer too much advice on it - my asclepias plants haven't been eager to spread even by seed.
Thank you for the timely top tip Jason! I've always loved the look of Nepeta but always stayed awayed as I was afraid they might attract cats in the neighborhood. Could you please share if you've had any cat issues with nepeta?
No, I haven't. I think this may be one of those times that the common name is a bit too general. Nepeta cataria is catnip, but that's just the one species. My own experience (and what I've heard from a number of other gardeners) is that there's been no issues with "pest cats" on the ornamental cousins. YMMV
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks Jason for your advice! Nepeta looks just too gorgeous to miss out on. Oh, the term "pest cats" cracked me up! :)
Are you growing these from seed? Once grown can they be propagated by cuttings?
Most yes, and I can also prop most anything from cuttings.
I was never that impressed by agastaches; bit boring nondescript blues. But bought some agastache blackadder a couple of years ago and it has real impact. Beautiful colour that blends well with everything.
Thanks - yes! Great cultivar.
What are the temperatures these perennials con tolerate, and frost? Thanks
I listed a hardiness zone for each plant and that corresponds to the USDA zones for minimum temps.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Right, thanks!
Nothing for zone 7?
Just about everything for zone 7. If it's hardy to a lower zone it'll survive a milder winter - so all the ones listed for 7 and below are for you.
Why only one zone? Can you next time put up from Zones 3-9 or? It would be very helpful. Thank you!
Hi Kathy. These are cold hardiness zones - the lowest named zone is the coldest, and any milder climate won't be a threat to winter survival.
Which ones are disliked by deer?
They say that deer don't love minty plants (like the catmint or agastache) but other gardeners remind me that deer will eat most anything depending on whether or not they can find something they prefer.
What about perennial peonies?
Great plant, but usually a pretty limited bloom period.
Why has there never been a blue coloured rose?
The pigment is naturally absent in the genetics of roses. They can get close (with lavender and mauve) but no true blue without genetic modification.
I only have bee balm. It gets quite mildewy, Not as happy with it as I thought I would from much praise of it from RUclipsrs
Thanks. Powdery mildew is definitely one of its vulnerabilities. That can be varietal - 'Jacob Cline' is an older variety that shows some resistance, and they're still trying to manage it by breeding resistance into new cultivars. I also have enjoyed M. punctata which is a bit wilder looking, but gorgeous mauve and spotted flowers - not too much in the way of mildew.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm sounds good, where can I find such varieties?
Always cut dead back. Dead keeps the new from growing. People.