Whenever someone asks me what flower to give a child who wants to garden, or says they want flowers but have a brown thumb I tell them get zinnias. They come in a variety of sizes and colors. Cosmos are almost as good, and when my town planted them in a boarder in a newly designated park they grew to be taller than I was. Calendulas were planted nearby and they popped out from between the cosmos stems. Thanks for telling me what that flower is! My town planted them in downtown and I couldn't tell what they were. I knew they weren't a snapdragon taxonomically speaking but I didn't know what it was. Angelonia. I'll remember that now. Globe amaranth dries well too. Until my cat knocked the vase over and broke the stems. I'm much more interested in it's larger relatives though. A few love lies bleeding plants at the community garden garnered huge complements. They'd just put in an inclement weather shelter for the Homeless next to the garden and they loved the color. With an audience certain, I went all out to try and stun onlookers with perennials and edible flowers. And by the way, amaranth leaves can be harvested, though I'm not sure if globe amaranth is edible. There are also wild varieties that can cross pollenate with domestic ones, so keep your eyes pealed the following year. Salvias are related to sage, and they're very hardy too. From what I've heard butterflies and humming birds like them. But I'd rather have plants that are less common, and salvia is sold everywhere. Sunflowers were the first garden plant I ever grew. I was six or seven years old and marveled at the giant plants bigger than I was. Last year at the community garden, I had the lady in charge leave a couple of dead sunflower stems behind for me. This year I want to see if I can cover them in scarlet runner beans. Sunflowers and Amaranth are often planted with the three sisters (corn, beans, and squash) to attract birds that would eat pest insects. Hopi Black Dye is one I'd love to try, but for now I'm keeping a few mammoth sunflowers and a packet each of autumn queen and a smaller many branched variety. I have a pot of Rudbekia, and I grew up calling them black eyed susans. Where I live they are a good indicator plant to tell me when to start looking for raspberries. As they bloom around the time wild raspberries start ripening. Almost every empty lot in town has wild black raspberries growing in it, and if it doesn't, odds are good you'll find wild grapes instead. Both fruits have very strong sour flavors, and make good jelly. I have a trailing foliage vinca that was leftover from my neighbors' planter boxes. They put them to the curb in a mass of sodlike roots and soil, and I snatched them up and simply laid the soil out in my garden bed and watered it as a way to transplant them. I'm at the edge of zone 3/4 and they still came back. Mexican sunflowers grow very well, and almost form into a bush when fully mature. They can get larger than a person (and I'm 5'3" so at lest that size), and they're a favorite stop for monarch butterflies. If you love monarchs, plant this flower. Once when i found a very cold monarch in deep shade in autumn, I picked it up on my finger and brought it to the sunny community garden where a mexican sunflower was growing. I put the butterfly on one of the flowers and snapped photograph after photograph before leaving it to its own devices and checking the other beds to see how they were doing. When I'd looked closely enough, I could even see it feeling around with its proboscis looking for nectar, and watched it drink. A few minutes later that monarch was well enough to fly away. That picture is on my phone as my background now, as it's one of my prized achievements in photographing my gardening pursuits. There are two kinds of basil that are my favorites that I want to draw attention to, but over the years I've grown ten or twelve different varieties. They are purple basils and tulsi basils. There are multiple kinds of purple basil and four kinds of tulsi (three breeds and a mut). Purple basils get darker and glossier the hotter and brighter the sun is on them. In full spread just wuzzling the leaves releases a potent basil scent, and the leaves are PACKED with flavor. In general itallian basils like the purple ones have white flowers, and asian varieties pink or purple, not so with the purple basils. Their color goes through and through, including the flowers. They grow slowly, so it's best to start them from plants and get cuttings. Tulsi basils are an asian basil much older than either thai varieties or itallian varieties. They come from India, and have a slightly higher tolerance to darkness than other basils. Their scent is unique, and so is their flavor, tasting of spices and fruit, but nothing specific I've been able to pin down. There are four varieties and two species of tulsi basil, O. Sanctum and O. Tenuifolium. They are also called Holy Basil because they were grown in and around Hindu shrines. They're used in ayurvedic medicine for issues with digestion and stress. The former is a medicinal property of all basils, but medicinal concentrations vary per variety. I've shredded holy basil leaves and blossoms fresh from the plant into my coffee grounds in the morning in summer, and it's a welcome ritual of the warm weather. In southern latitudes, basil is perennial, and can be pruned and trained into a shrub, and tulsi is no exception. Towards the end of the season use clear plastic to cover the plant in order to keep it warm, keep the covering low, or the hot air will rise out of the plant's reach. It will survive for a little while inside during winter, and may even thrive, but my apartment gets a lot of pests in the winter, so I haven't had the pleasure. I highly endorse this plant as both an edible tea herb, an ingredient in asian cooking, and a pleasant and stimulating smell and taste for hot tired souls.
The application of prairie plants in our environments add nutrient to the soil and also serves as sustainability for agriculture systems which promotes our agricultural productivity. It is very important to have them around our farms in order to prevent erosions and add beauty to our farming environments.
I'm so glad I found you. We live in the same area and I desperately need all your advice because I love flowers, gardening but just don't know how to do it in hot Arizona! Thank you. I'm looking forward to learning more from your videos to create the english garden I've always wanted!
Thanks for sharing. I have many flower seeds but haven't tried growing any. I usually buy transplants. Thanks for pointing out the flowers that do better from seeds. 💞
Wonderful video & thank you for all the info! 😊 I live in a semi-arid desert climate similar to yours so your videos are very useful to me. Many of the RUclips gardening channels I watch are located in areas that don’t deal with scorching hot summers (100+ degrees for 1-2 months straight) so some of the information they provide is not necessarily pertinent to my particular growing situation. You & John Kohler are my favorite desert climate RUclips gardeners. You are a great inspiration to me & I am very thankful for the content you provide 🌞💚🌻
Thank you for the great examples and tips! I just picked up Angelonia from the nursery based on look, so it's great to learn that it likes the sun and heat.
Very helpful, thank you! 😌 planning on surprising my mom this mother's day by adding more of her fabe beautiful flowers to her garden since she can't afford all the ones she loves, too many! Most of these are her faves😁
I'm re watching this video today for some inspiration and thinking what will do well in our heat with 3 hours sun which is all I can give for flowers . Prime spots are reserved for tomatoes and peppers . I have had success with dwarf marigolds , vinca , blue lobelia , clasping coneflower and alyssum too , my garden being south facing gets sun only in the 2nd half of the year. Will try Snapdragon . My all time favourite easy ones for the bees are mustard and basil .
Great video! I'm glad to have found your channel. I live in a similarly very hot dry climate (in summer) in Southern California, so your recommendations will be great.
Majority of these plants were annuals am not sure if this coming back in my Zone 6. I believed I planted Cosmos a year ago but it didn’t come back!😳😩 so with Vinca and 4 o’clock ! I believed it’s still good to plant long draught perennials that will be coming year after year 😱😝😊
Hi Your video was very helpful and the flowers were so pretty Thank you for the great tips and for sharing your knowledge of these flowers Happiness and good health to you and your family!!!
I am so happy to be here ❤️ . I follow you on insta but somehow I didn't know you have a you tube channel . Got to know about your channel from the video that One Arizona Garden just posted . Will be watching all your videos 👌👌. I garden in a very hot and humid environment in Mumbai , India and find Arizona gardens fascinate me .
Love your channel! I always learn something new. I would love to see more videos on growing flowers in AZ if possible. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge on gardening has helped me out so much
I live in East Mesa. I have seedlings that are ready to plant outside but the temps are still under 45 degrees. What seedlings can take the cold? I have zinnias, cosmos, rudbeckia, hybrid poppy, tomato, zucchini, and hyacinth.
Hi Angela! Do you start your Lisianthus from seed? I love their look but am wondering if transplants or seeds are better. If transplants are better would you mind sharing where you purchase your transplants from please? Thank you and have a great weekend! 💕
I grow in Chico Calif and we have a similar summer to yours. Thank you for your info….especially the drip tube company you use! Can I ask how often you water your raised beds in the summer? Is daily too much?
Angela ~ I'm assuming in Arizona that you have a block wall? Do you know if sunflowers will take the heat that radiates off the wall? I'm in NM high desert in the desert full sun & have had absolutely NO luck trying to grow vegies. I'm going to give it one more shot this year and build a keyhole raised bed which will butt up to the block wall. Thought planting some mammoth sunflowers in the bed next to the wall would provide some shade to the vegies (along with shade cloth, of course). TIA
Yes they tolerate full sun. They can take up quite a bit of room and can have some allelopathic effects, so I would put them outside of the beds where ever you want to have shade. They grow well in native soil.
Okey doke...that shuts down my idea of growing them in the raised bed for shade. Any other suggestions for a tall plant that I could grow in a bed against the brick wall with vegies in the same bed?@@GrowingInTheGarden
How often do you water zinnias? I live in Vegas where it’s dry and hot all the time. They started sprouting, but I don’t if I should water them once a week or a few times a week. I’m scared to overwater and underwater them
Great channel. I grow a tropical fruit trees forest in my yard, recently been slowly adding flowers to it to makes the wife happy. Do you by chance sell some seeds combo containing most of these flowers? I don't need much, just a bit of each. Thanks.
Hello . I live in Chandler Arizona my mom told me to follow your channel. Now unfortunately I didn’t see the plant I’m looking for on your list and I was wondering if you know how Chrysanthemums “mums” do in our summer months out here ? I have 8 huge mum plants that I fear won’t make it through the hot summer months and yesterday their leafs started taking a turn for the worst . Is it best I buy large pots and transplant them before summer ? My only thing is I don’t want to keep transplanting them from pots in summer back into the ground for fall winter and spring and back up for summer ? Please help need your advise !?
It depends. I've had them go dormant and die back some during the summer and then come back in the fall. Other times, they don't survive the summer. If they have some shade, I wouldn't prune them back and see how they do. Pulling them up for transplanting them now may kill them too.
Hi! I absolutely love your channel. Just moved to az so it is incredibly helpful! Any solutions for birds eating away zinnias? I feel like I've tried it all! Thanks again!
Thanks. Birds can be such nuisances. Right now birds are loving my Armenian cucumber leaves. Other than netting, I haven't found a lot that is helpful. I am going to try a garlic spray today on the leaves. Not sure if that will help or not. Wish I had a better answer for you. Some people have luck with pinwheels, etc.
Hello! I just started gardening and I was wondering about Lisianthus. I only have one stem blooming 3-4 flowers should I have trimmed it back to get more stems? And is it too late to do that now? I appreciate the help!
I'd enjoy the blooms for now and then cut it back after the blooms fade. This should encourage more blooms. growinginthegarden.com/how-to-grow-lisianthus-10-tips-for-growing-lisianthus/
Hi Angela! Are dahlias something that can be grown in Arizona? I haven't had any luck finding information online. I'm zone 9b. Is there no way to grow them here? Is it the soil? Heat? I saw on the UofA flower planting guide for the low desert and I see dahlias listed but it's listed as difficulty to grow. Any input is appreciated! Thank you!
@@GrowingInTheGarden thank you so much! I'd really appreciate that! I've been wanting to get a general time of when to plant them in our area and I've had no luck. I can't wait to see what you can grow 🥰
I looked up 42°-46° celsius and it converts to 105°-115° F which is the exact same weather she (and me) is growing in! We're in Phoenix, Arizona so for about 4 or 5 months in the summer it's consistently above 100° F each day. Hell, when its 105 (42° C) out everyone here says "Hey that's not even bad!" because we are all used to 115-120 for two months straight.
Well now I know y the zinnia died on me...😌 Even the Rabbits Paw or Creeping Daisies & Portulaca do well in the summer heat ( just FYI)...😅 Cz we have these planted here in the UAE all along streets and places that are bare and get the scorching sun.. 💚🙋🏻
I've grown 4 o'clock from seed and it does fine. I've never grown it from transplant. The seeds do take a little while to germinate, but it grows well from seed.
1- Zinnias
2- Angelonia
3- Globe Amaranth
4- Red Salvia
5- Sunflower
6- Cosmos
7- Coreopsis
8- Rudbeckia
9- Vinca
10- Blue Savia
11- Four O'clock
12- Gaillardia
13- Lisianthus
14- Mexican Hat,
15-Mexican Sunflower
16-Basil and Sage
Thanks for making the list. I was looking for it. The only one missing from the list is Vinca. Also, basil, not Brazil.
This video is my bible! I have literally watched it a dozen+ times. I keep coming back over and over to learn about the flowers I bought. Thank you!
Cosmos is an great plant and easily transplant early in the year and reseed, especially orange cosmos.
Whenever someone asks me what flower to give a child who wants to garden, or says they want flowers but have a brown thumb I tell them get zinnias. They come in a variety of sizes and colors. Cosmos are almost as good, and when my town planted them in a boarder in a newly designated park they grew to be taller than I was. Calendulas were planted nearby and they popped out from between the cosmos stems.
Thanks for telling me what that flower is! My town planted them in downtown and I couldn't tell what they were. I knew they weren't a snapdragon taxonomically speaking but I didn't know what it was. Angelonia. I'll remember that now.
Globe amaranth dries well too. Until my cat knocked the vase over and broke the stems. I'm much more interested in it's larger relatives though. A few love lies bleeding plants at the community garden garnered huge complements. They'd just put in an inclement weather shelter for the Homeless next to the garden and they loved the color. With an audience certain, I went all out to try and stun onlookers with perennials and edible flowers. And by the way, amaranth leaves can be harvested, though I'm not sure if globe amaranth is edible. There are also wild varieties that can cross pollenate with domestic ones, so keep your eyes pealed the following year.
Salvias are related to sage, and they're very hardy too. From what I've heard butterflies and humming birds like them. But I'd rather have plants that are less common, and salvia is sold everywhere.
Sunflowers were the first garden plant I ever grew. I was six or seven years old and marveled at the giant plants bigger than I was. Last year at the community garden, I had the lady in charge leave a couple of dead sunflower stems behind for me. This year I want to see if I can cover them in scarlet runner beans. Sunflowers and Amaranth are often planted with the three sisters (corn, beans, and squash) to attract birds that would eat pest insects. Hopi Black Dye is one I'd love to try, but for now I'm keeping a few mammoth sunflowers and a packet each of autumn queen and a smaller many branched variety.
I have a pot of Rudbekia, and I grew up calling them black eyed susans. Where I live they are a good indicator plant to tell me when to start looking for raspberries. As they bloom around the time wild raspberries start ripening. Almost every empty lot in town has wild black raspberries growing in it, and if it doesn't, odds are good you'll find wild grapes instead. Both fruits have very strong sour flavors, and make good jelly.
I have a trailing foliage vinca that was leftover from my neighbors' planter boxes. They put them to the curb in a mass of sodlike roots and soil, and I snatched them up and simply laid the soil out in my garden bed and watered it as a way to transplant them. I'm at the edge of zone 3/4 and they still came back.
Mexican sunflowers grow very well, and almost form into a bush when fully mature. They can get larger than a person (and I'm 5'3" so at lest that size), and they're a favorite stop for monarch butterflies. If you love monarchs, plant this flower. Once when i found a very cold monarch in deep shade in autumn, I picked it up on my finger and brought it to the sunny community garden where a mexican sunflower was growing. I put the butterfly on one of the flowers and snapped photograph after photograph before leaving it to its own devices and checking the other beds to see how they were doing. When I'd looked closely enough, I could even see it feeling around with its proboscis looking for nectar, and watched it drink. A few minutes later that monarch was well enough to fly away. That picture is on my phone as my background now, as it's one of my prized achievements in photographing my gardening pursuits.
There are two kinds of basil that are my favorites that I want to draw attention to, but over the years I've grown ten or twelve different varieties. They are purple basils and tulsi basils. There are multiple kinds of purple basil and four kinds of tulsi (three breeds and a mut). Purple basils get darker and glossier the hotter and brighter the sun is on them. In full spread just wuzzling the leaves releases a potent basil scent, and the leaves are PACKED with flavor. In general itallian basils like the purple ones have white flowers, and asian varieties pink or purple, not so with the purple basils. Their color goes through and through, including the flowers. They grow slowly, so it's best to start them from plants and get cuttings.
Tulsi basils are an asian basil much older than either thai varieties or itallian varieties. They come from India, and have a slightly higher tolerance to darkness than other basils. Their scent is unique, and so is their flavor, tasting of spices and fruit, but nothing specific I've been able to pin down. There are four varieties and two species of tulsi basil, O. Sanctum and O. Tenuifolium. They are also called Holy Basil because they were grown in and around Hindu shrines. They're used in ayurvedic medicine for issues with digestion and stress. The former is a medicinal property of all basils, but medicinal concentrations vary per variety. I've shredded holy basil leaves and blossoms fresh from the plant into my coffee grounds in the morning in summer, and it's a welcome ritual of the warm weather. In southern latitudes, basil is perennial, and can be pruned and trained into a shrub, and tulsi is no exception. Towards the end of the season use clear plastic to cover the plant in order to keep it warm, keep the covering low, or the hot air will rise out of the plant's reach. It will survive for a little while inside during winter, and may even thrive, but my apartment gets a lot of pests in the winter, so I haven't had the pleasure. I highly endorse this plant as both an edible tea herb, an ingredient in asian cooking, and a pleasant and stimulating smell and taste for hot tired souls.
Blue Salvia plants are really stunning in the garden. Great choices!
The application of prairie plants in our environments add nutrient to the soil and also serves as sustainability for agriculture systems which promotes our agricultural productivity. It is very important to have them around our farms in order to prevent erosions and add beauty to our farming environments.
Just finding you and amazed with your communication skills. To the point, clear and informative...thank you!
I'm so glad I found you. We live in the same area and I desperately need all your advice because I love flowers, gardening but just don't know how to do it in hot Arizona! Thank you. I'm looking forward to learning more from your videos to create the english garden I've always wanted!
Welcome! Happy to have you. Thanks for watching and best of luck with your garden!
Zinnia is my favourite!,balsam is another one I like!
Thanks for sharing. I have many flower seeds but haven't tried growing any. I usually buy transplants. Thanks for pointing out the flowers that do better from seeds. 💞
Thank U....great list...my fave r the 4 o'clock!!! They do great in south Texas💗
Wonderful video & thank you for all the info! 😊
I live in a semi-arid desert climate similar to yours so your videos are very useful to me. Many of the RUclips gardening channels I watch are located in areas that don’t deal with scorching hot summers (100+ degrees for 1-2 months straight) so some of the information they provide is not necessarily pertinent to my particular growing situation. You & John Kohler are my favorite desert climate RUclips gardeners. You are a great inspiration to me & I am very thankful for the content you provide 🌞💚🌻
Thank you for the great examples and tips! I just picked up Angelonia from the nursery based on look, so it's great to learn that it likes the sun and heat.
Very helpful, thank you! 😌 planning on surprising my mom this mother's day by adding more of her fabe beautiful flowers to her garden since she can't afford all the ones she loves, too many! Most of these are her faves😁
What a nice thought. Lucky mom!
I'm re watching this video today for some inspiration and thinking what will do well in our heat with 3 hours sun which is all I can give for flowers . Prime spots are reserved for tomatoes and peppers .
I have had success with dwarf marigolds , vinca , blue lobelia , clasping coneflower and alyssum too , my garden being south facing gets sun only in the 2nd half of the year. Will try Snapdragon .
My all time favourite easy ones for the bees are mustard and basil .
You got this! Sounds like a good plan. Basil is my favorite too. There are so many fun varieties.
Thank you so much from Scottsdale. I already use 4 types here.
Thank you! Now I know, and understand why some flowers haven't done so well for me!
Great advice on culture.
Very helpful information! I know more about growing summer flowers and believe I will do better the next year!
Very good information to know in a hot climate.
Great video! I'm glad to have found your channel. I live in a similarly very hot dry climate (in summer) in Southern California, so your recommendations will be great.
Northern gardeners: her suggestions for when to plant are for ARIZONA
Great information! I love your channel!
This was wonderful!! Thank you for sharing!
Excellent info very helpful for desert weather Gardening
Thanks a lot
Majority of these plants were annuals am not sure if this coming back in my Zone 6. I believed I planted Cosmos a year ago but it didn’t come back!😳😩 so with Vinca and 4 o’clock ! I believed it’s still good to plant long draught perennials that will be coming year after year 😱😝😊
Lovely gardening
Thanks for visiting
Hello from Toronto.
Thanks for the tips and lessons.
Thanks for watching. Hi from Arizona 😊
Hi
Your video was very helpful and the flowers were so pretty
Thank you for the great tips and for sharing your knowledge of these flowers
Happiness and good health to you and your family!!!
I am so happy to be here ❤️ . I follow you on insta but somehow I didn't know you have a you tube channel .
Got to know about your channel from the video that One Arizona Garden just posted .
Will be watching all your videos 👌👌.
I garden in a very hot and humid environment in Mumbai , India and find Arizona gardens fascinate me .
Hi! I know you from insta too. Yes, I've recently started adding videos. Thanks for following along.
Very good information 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you it was very informative to get your know how love these flowers.
Glad it was helpful!
Nice tip. Thanks🌺
Very informational, thank you for sharing. I love your videos and garden.
Glad you like them! Thanks for watching.
Very interesting video! :) I bet the insects have a great time in your garden.
Ha, ha! Yep, lots of happy bugs in my garden, mostly good guys though.
Some of them are wild flowers in Malaysia 💕
now i know if i am a flower i i will be cosmos 🙂 thanks for this vid...
Love your channel! I always learn something new. I would love to see more videos on growing flowers in AZ if possible. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge on gardening has helped me out so much
Good idea. I'll try to do that. Thanks for the support.
Thank you 💛
Thank you 🙏🏾🙏🏾
Woooohoooooo thank you 🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
Black foot.daisy almost hates water and loves heat. And blooms like.crazy and no.dead heading.
Good point. I love Blackfoot daisy.
It would be super helpful to have zoned for these
Great info! Thank you!
I'm in northern AZ and having a hard time. Thank you for this
You're welcome!
Thank for such informative video!
Thanks for watching!
Also dwarf dahlias and crown of thorns. I had lisianthus but it died. Lantanas like hot sun, butterflies like them too.
Good tip, thanks!
Thanks a lot ,all your videos are exelentets!!
Glad you like them!
Well done!
Thanks!
@@GrowingInTheGarden Great content, well organized and clearly presented. (I live in Albuquerque-talk about "tricky" gardening!)
I live in East Mesa. I have seedlings that are ready to plant outside but the temps are still under 45 degrees. What seedlings can take the cold? I have zinnias, cosmos, rudbeckia, hybrid poppy, tomato, zucchini, and hyacinth.
Thank you thank you from the desert
You are very welcome, thanks for watching.
Thank you 😊
Thank you so much 😊
Great list. Extremely helpful
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks! Maybe I won't accidently kill those plants now with some great advice!😉☘
Ha! Best of luck to you!
I've never had much luck with cosmos in deep south 9b. Maybe my soil is too rich?
Hi Angela! Do you start your Lisianthus from seed? I love their look but am wondering if transplants or seeds are better. If transplants are better would you mind sharing where you purchase your transplants from please? Thank you and have a great weekend! 💕
Lisianthus are tricky to grow from seed. I purchased mine from Summerwinds Nursery and also from Burpee www.burpee.com/flowers/lisianthus/
Muy great👌🏿
Thanks for watching 👍🏻
I grow in Chico Calif and we have a similar summer to yours. Thank you for your info….especially the drip tube company you use! Can I ask how often you water your raised beds in the summer? Is daily too much?
I usually water every other day during the hottest months of the. year.
Was wondering, have you done blueberries, blackberries or raspberries? How do they do with the AZ heat?
Blackberries do well here. Raspberries and blueberries don't do well in our climate typically.
Cosmos: tolerates poor soil, avg conditions, neglect🥲 damn
They are a tough flower
Hi Question what is the vine in back of you and does it do good in the heat?
Coral Vine - yes it thrives in the summer heat: growinginthegarden.com/how-to-grow-coral-vine-growing-queens-wreath/
Hot hot summers!
I wonder if these would translate to SW Fl. Every year it gets hotter and hotter.
I think that several do. the difference would be your humidity which is helpful for some plants, but not all.
Thank you.
You're welcome!
Thank u🥰
Angela ~ I'm assuming in Arizona that you have a block wall? Do you know if sunflowers will take the heat that radiates off the wall? I'm in NM high desert in the desert full sun & have had absolutely NO luck trying to grow vegies. I'm going to give it one more shot this year and build a keyhole raised bed which will butt up to the block wall. Thought planting some mammoth sunflowers in the bed next to the wall would provide some shade to the vegies (along with shade cloth, of course). TIA
Yes they tolerate full sun. They can take up quite a bit of room and can have some allelopathic effects, so I would put them outside of the beds where ever you want to have shade. They grow well in native soil.
Okey doke...that shuts down my idea of growing them in the raised bed for shade. Any other suggestions for a tall plant that I could grow in a bed against the brick wall with vegies in the same bed?@@GrowingInTheGarden
Michele Dover of Buffalo Montana.
Can you recommend flowers with. No smell or fragrance?
How often do you water zinnias? I live in Vegas where it’s dry and hot all the time. They started sprouting, but I don’t if I should water them once a week or a few times a week. I’m scared to overwater and underwater them
Depends on your soil. Water deeply and then let the top inch or so of soil dry out again before you water.
Great channel. I grow a tropical fruit trees forest in my yard, recently been slowly adding flowers to it to makes the wife happy. Do you by chance sell some seeds combo containing most of these flowers? I don't need much, just a bit of each. Thanks.
Sorry, no. The only seeds I have for sale are luffa seeds: growinginthegarden.bigcartel.com/products
Angela, can you grow sweet peas flowers in Glendale Arizona?
Absolutely, here is a blogpost with more information: growinginthegarden.com/how-to-grow-sweet-peas-5-tips-for-growing-sweet-peas/
I always thought that Lisianthus needed cooler weather?
No - it loves the heat
4
Excellent info for any type of gardener. Should slow down your speech for those of us taking notes. Good video shots.
what do you mean by thin those seedlings? can you elaborate please
Remove extra seedlings that are too close to each other
@@GrowingInTheGarden Thanks
Hi is it possible to grow dahlias in tropical climate
They like warm temps, not sure about the humidity. They don't love our hot summers but do well in our warm months.
Hello . I live in Chandler Arizona my mom told me to follow your channel. Now unfortunately I didn’t see the plant I’m looking for on your list and I was wondering if you know how Chrysanthemums “mums” do in our summer months out here ? I have 8 huge mum plants that I fear won’t make it through the hot summer months and yesterday their leafs started taking a turn for the worst . Is it best I buy large pots and transplant them before summer ? My only thing is I don’t want to keep transplanting them from pots in summer back into the ground for fall winter and spring and back up for summer ? Please help need your advise !?
It depends. I've had them go dormant and die back some during the summer and then come back in the fall. Other times, they don't survive the summer. If they have some shade, I wouldn't prune them back and see how they do. Pulling them up for transplanting them now may kill them too.
What nurseries sell angelonia?
Would home depot have them, or A&P?
I'm in mesa
Most will once they get the warm season flowers in stock. Check A&P Nursery.
Thanks so much!!!
Hi! I absolutely love your channel. Just moved to az so it is incredibly helpful!
Any solutions for birds eating away zinnias? I feel like I've tried it all! Thanks again!
Thanks. Birds can be such nuisances. Right now birds are loving my Armenian cucumber leaves. Other than netting, I haven't found a lot that is helpful. I am going to try a garlic spray today on the leaves. Not sure if that will help or not. Wish I had a better answer for you. Some people have luck with pinwheels, etc.
Are you talking about Florida zone 10 humid wet summers
I'm speaking from the experience of gardening here in the low desert of Phoenix, It is much drier here, but very hot.
Oh yes completely different from tropical paradise Florida where there are Everglades. It rains heavily in the summer months! Very very humid.
Where are u in mesa
Love your videos. Very very helpful ! Can I ask where you got your arbor from ? Is that redwood ? Thanks.
Thanks for watching. I purchased the arbor years ago at Lowe's, it's metal. the wood poles are to keep it from tipping over in the monsoons.
Hello! I just started gardening and I was wondering about Lisianthus. I only have one stem blooming 3-4 flowers should I have trimmed it back to get more stems? And is it too late to do that now? I appreciate the help!
I'd enjoy the blooms for now and then cut it back after the blooms fade. This should encourage more blooms. growinginthegarden.com/how-to-grow-lisianthus-10-tips-for-growing-lisianthus/
Coneflowers love heat
Good tip!
Red salvia sounds like Salvia coccinea.
I am living in the caribbean. What cut flower can grow in heat. Thank you.
Not sure, check with a local nursery or grower.
Could someone tell me what thinning the seeds means?
Removing extra seedlings that sprout.
@@GrowingInTheGarden okay thank you I am new to gardening lol so some terminology or phrases I am not sure of. Enjoying this channel thank you!
❤
What kind of soil do you plant your sunflowers in? Mine all died.
Most of mine are planted in my raised beds, the soil is a mixture of compost, vermiculite and peat moss.
Hi Angela! Are dahlias something that can be grown in Arizona? I haven't had any luck finding information online. I'm zone 9b. Is there no way to grow them here? Is it the soil? Heat? I saw on the UofA flower planting guide for the low desert and I see dahlias listed but it's listed as difficulty to grow. Any input is appreciated! Thank you!
I'm growing them for the first time this year, I'll let you know!
@@GrowingInTheGarden thank you so much! I'd really appreciate that! I've been wanting to get a general time of when to plant them in our area and I've had no luck. I can't wait to see what you can grow 🥰
I live in Australia in 42 - 46 degrees temperature. I don’t think these will cut it.
Good to know.
I looked up 42°-46° celsius and it converts to 105°-115° F which is the exact same weather she (and me) is growing in! We're in Phoenix, Arizona so for about 4 or 5 months in the summer it's consistently above 100° F each day. Hell, when its 105 (42° C) out everyone here says "Hey that's not even bad!" because we are all used to 115-120 for two months straight.
Now how many of these will the deer ignore?
Good question, I'm not sure. (No deer where I live.)
how do you keep grasshoppers from eating your flowers
Grasshoppers haven't been an issue in my area.
Who do you buy seeds from?
Usually Botanical Interests: shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=250954&u=2736599&m=28945&urllink=&afftrack=
Well now I know y the zinnia died on me...😌
Even the Rabbits Paw or Creeping Daisies & Portulaca do well in the summer heat ( just FYI)...😅
Cz we have these planted here in the UAE all along streets and places that are bare and get the scorching sun.. 💚🙋🏻
Nice, good to know. Thanks for watching.
Is 4 o clock best from seed or transplant?
I've grown 4 o'clock from seed and it does fine. I've never grown it from transplant. The seeds do take a little while to germinate, but it grows well from seed.
I thought that you're Agatha from Wandavision 🥺
Lovebirds?!? Do you have lovebirds in the wild? I’m in the Dallas area, and they are just pets here.
Yes, they are common here - love them!
Where can I buy the seeds ?
I like Renee's for flower seeds sh2543.ositracker.com/159509/9151