I really love this video because I have hard clay soil, zone 9 so, it gets very hot Southern California). Currently planting a steep hillside that's approximately 400sq ft. This video has been invaluable as I REALLY don't want to grow ground cover in this area. Thank you for reminding me that I can use some of the perennials in your example - keep the butterflies and hummingbirds visiting my backyard!
Im So CA too. Bearded iris, buddleia. Lavender and the small rose Drift kind do fabulous! We added 2 mimosa trees for dappled shade on the big slope. The plants and wildlife flock there daily.
@@MissDeb-jq6nz it IS a slope -thank you 😊. So far I have a mess due to my indecision and "garden trials" This area gets blasted with full sun. So far, drift red roses and butterfly bush are my top faves. I'm removing everything else as it looks too chaotic. Thanks for the comment.
@@jillspady6450 your idea is wonderful. I already had the spreading red roses on the slope. Also, I recently planted a butterfly bush and the two together look AMAZING Those two jewel tones are incredible together! Perhaps I will try lavender, rosemary and roses out front. I don't know much about Iris plants, but willing to learn as long as I get visits from colorful pollinators! Thank you for sharing your garden ideas with me.
@@mamabear9509 find an iris group near you. They are sooooo easy. Plant them shallow, backs in the sun, don't over water, divide every 4 to 5 years. And be sure to watch for early, mid and late bloomers to have spectacular beauty for up to 2 months, then it's time for the roses. And don't forget salvia! And gladiolas! Salvia is wonderful. Hummers, bees, long color. Can't beat them!
And to prune out the 3 D’s Dead, Damaged and Diseased. Also he didn’t mention but you want to prune out any branches that cross and rub against each other or inward towards the center; usually trees and shrubs.
Rosanna Rosanna Lantana 🤣🤣🤣. You are dating yourself Allen. I hope I can make a trip back to Moss Mountain this year. Your gardens are so beautiful and they by far beat my local botanical gardens. Trumpet vine is considered a noxious invasive plant in my area but the ruby throated hummingbirds love them and may have co-evolved in the Midwest with the trumpet vine and its range.
"...and you can see that I've absolutely lost my mind and have planted them everywhere" lol!!!!! I can 100% relate. I have a small yard in Fruita, CO and ive got the neighbors wondering about my sanity. They jokingly ask what im going to plant next 😅
I love this guy! Today was my first time I saw his vlog and I don't watch pbs except when Downton Abbey was on, but I will absolutely watch this fella! I learned more about gardens, both flower and vegetables gardens today then in years. He is easy to understand and his voice is easy on the ears!
Don't know if it'd be possible, but would love a video about flower garden design/layout. Have a new house and flower beds and would love to know what considerations go into plant choice and placement. Either way, thanks for all the videos and knowledge :)
Jeri Landers The Storybook 'Creating a Cut flower garden' goes into a bit of detail in garden bed design. Would love to see more of planting schemes too.
Your videos are some of the best on RUclips 😁 Always informative with wonderful doses of comedy, thank you P. Allen Smith. Subscriber watching from Derby, UK.
My mother said that when she was little, she heard the ladies call the pink and yellow lantana, ham and eggs....😁 I love lantana!!! And, I love you and your videos!!!!
Please keep your VLOGs coming! This one is so timely for me. Received my lavender from GHW yesterday and I'm planting them today. Going to try them in ground in a dry area. Lantana does beautifully for me and is worth replanting it each year since it's not hardy to my zone. And love, love, love the sun coleus. They performed great last year. Best quote, "I don't know if I'd look this good if I went through the winter outside." LOL
My Nanny had a Lantana in her front yard, she cut it back every year, because it came back on new wood. She had it for over 50 years old. It was huge and just gorgeous. Pink orange,yellows.
There are some salvia that are perenial i the N zone 5. where it can get 20 below for wks. . I can't name them off the top of my head. But I have one that came back this yr..
My momma used to say that "A weed is only a weed if you don't want it in your flower bed! If you do want it,well then, its a strong grower or easy to grow or very hardy perenial!"
I am a new gardener and I’m learning so much. You touched on something that I have just figured out. In some parts of the country perennials can be annuals. I think I’m in one of those areas in zone 7A. So many flowers and plants just come back every year.
You cracked me up with this one! You were extra spicy haha Thanks for so many helpful tips. I'm planning a huge new bed this year and need all the help I can get! 🌸😂
Hi from Winnipeg Canada! Zone 3 here🥶 my Salvia comes back every year. Mulched with a bit of compost , watered before freeze up in mid October , then fine bark mulch. I grow those lovely Lilies too. We get snow usually at the end of October so evergreens are important for winter interest.
Excellent video, full of great advice. Another plant attractive for hummingbirds is sweet peas; they keep coming every day. If I may add a tip for growing lavender in a humid climate, if you want to have them in the ground, plant them in a mound, so that water drains easily and the roots don't stagnate.
Hello! I remember watching P Allen Smith on PBS as a little girl with my mom as she transformed our backyard in Brooklyn. Now I am watching these shows in quarantine on YT as I transform my side yard and back yard ! Thank you for this wonderful advice on perrenials! Love from Portland OR!
Here's an idea for a companion plants, I planted two Don Juan roses this will be their second year this coming spring, I have morning glories that I planted under the trellis as well they are white I think the white and red contrast will look awesome and I realize that morning glories can be an invasive plant but I will harvest the seeds before they fall , have a good gardening spring next year!
We live in central SC and discovered the cigar plant last summer. As you said the hummingbirds love it! For the winter the man who helps us in the yard removed it from the pot and "buried" it about 3 or 4 inches beneath the surface of the ground. I rescued it in early Spring and guess what, it survived and is growing beautifully back in the large pot!
lolol Rosanna-rosanna lantana ! I love it!! Here in southern arizona Lantana is like honeysuckle back east. Its got its own agenda and will grow regardless of what you do. I have sadly found a way to kill it thought... watering toooooo much. Having got it right with my 3rd plant this time, I have that gorgeous pink/lemon species in a 20 inch clay pot that will dry out faster than the plastic ones, and it has done very well. Thank you for this video Allen !
I love perennials and volunteer in the perennial garden of our local botanic garden. I am keeping an eye on my in-ground, yellow lantana because I am not sure if it survived the snow and freeze of 2021 in North Texas. I also had purple lantana in a pot, which I lost.
A friend of my son's ask me about my flowers, she says they're always so pretty, and if I had any advice. I sent her your video from today and told her that she needs to watch P Allen Smith. 😁
Thank you! A very informative video. I love all flowers. I love perennial and annual combinations. I'm like a kid in a candy store come spring. I have so many ideas and you are right you never know until you try. Last year I planted marigold seeds in some cobalt blue containers in July ...I know very late but my idea was to have a display come fall and it worked! It was a beautiful combo the blue of the pot and the orange of the marigolds, although there weren't as big as the ones I had planted earlier they were still a beautiful display come fall.
I really like your attitude about experimentation. I never snub growing anything, I'm just cautious. Living in zone 6, I guess I've let myself be too careful; because I hate to see a plant struggle to death. I have been successful with plants that were recommended for warmer zones, and they've flourished. You've inspired me to be more experimental. How I miss living in the south, all the same!
I live in NY. near the Great Lakes and I have many Peonies and never thought about areas that can't grow them. I planted mine 14 years ago and would not move south and leave them behind. However I understand how others might feel about their area not being suitable for them, since I want Crape Myrtles but it is a bit too cold for them here. By the way, I just subscribed.
Oh my! Thank you! I was looking for something to go with my peachies pick stokes aster and I have two Miss Huff waiting to be planted somewhere. 😍 Perfect Thank You! Also for helping me in my duh phase with my hydrangea that rarely blooms.
Hello, love your videos , I look at your videos in Bristol England UK.have enjoyed gardening for years , Plant anything in my garden , as I love plants, am lucky growing most plants, my garden makes me feel happy and free.getting difficult but will continue for as long as I can eighty six years .Wish I had this Lovey hobby years. ago.yours Edna
I love your "rants"!!! I'm in Va. now, but grew up in Louisiana. Down south, Lantana is a perennial and can grow into a huge shrub. Definitely not a weed. My mother used to call them ham and eggs plants.
All this time I thought you were in England 😂 Loved seeing over views of your fabulous property. I'm in southern Indiana and building my number of perrenials in my organic, no dig, cottage garden that has no grass to mow any more. Love your program ❤️💕💗 Ms Pat
I love daylilies. Never seen a double form before and they will definitely feature in my garden. As for zinnias, they are super pretty. Grew them last year and will always grow them now.
I love watching your shows... they could be longer and that would be great!! I watch different shows and I think yours is my favorite! I’ve learned a lot!! Thank you!
Awesome video. I truly like all the information and inspiration coming from PAS. I would love to see a longer video on a topic because you are one of the best. Thank you.
I've enjoyed this video so much.I'm in zone 7 and plant only perennials that are tough.To my delight my pineapple saliva has made a come back! My heirloom southern roses are blooming and to my great shock my David Austin English rose is starting to bloom(I did a ton of amendment to the soil and am giving it partial shade)and my bare root trumpet vine is alive!My hummingbirds will be so happy as well as I.I have taken the attitude that only plants happy here in the southern Appalachians with our difficult clay soil will be in my garden.
A tip i use for my 60 Austins.... do a deep water for amazing results. Put the tip of the hose at the base of the bush. Turn it on, barely a trickle, where you can almost not tell waters coming out. Now leave the hose there and on For at least a day, 2 is better. Move to the next rose. The waters directs their roots deeper where it's cooler and the water is. Ive given this advice to my rose grower neighbors. You'll be amazed!
You have definitely opened my eye to being able to grow edible flowers for show and cooking with. The info you have been giving me , I know I can grow pretty much the same as you there in a zone 8, I am here in zone 7b (N.E. Tennessee) .Thank you 💖🙏
I’m definitely going to do some companion planting in two large containers on my patio. I love this video conversation. I love daylilies because the beauty makes me feel like an accomplished gardener even though I’m more of an advanced beginner. I have a question about how to feed them throughout the year
Allen great show,thank you for sharing and thank you very much for introducing me to GILBERT H. WILD AND SONS a good company. I am having fun ordering on line I cannot go to the nursery at this time.🙂
Well, I just found out why my peonies here in central Texas didn’t do much...I planted them too deep. Thanks for the encouragement to try things naysayers have discouraged me from trying. Do you think I can dig them up and try again? Or are they a lost cause? Planted last spring and they never emerged. 😭😭😭
What are your thoughts on the sweet almond verbena shrub.. I’m in zone 9B south of Houston… I think I want to keep it in a container because it smells so lovely… I’m concerned about putting it in the ground it might get too big… I have very heavy clay soil. I heard that it only wants morning sun
This was great. I am trying to learn how to plant my first perennial garden and found your show. I can’t wait to tell all my friends about your show and to watch more. Thank you.
Patrcia White yes! Please do. We did a multi-part series on perennials one my Vlog. We’re also sponsored by one of the largest growers of perennials www.gilberthwild.com. Go check them out. They always have great deals running.
No. But deadheading keeps them from going to seed and might give your more blooms because energy would be directed to blooms and not seed growth. I grow them.
I have a camellia bush it had big huge pods this winter but they didn't bloom until now I do not understand why Todd's didn't burst out in the winter thought they always have please tell me if my tree is sick because I do not want to lose it I love it
I have Mary Todd day lilies and lots of zinnias that I save seeds from every year. Love them! I've ordered 3 Lucious Bananarama lantanas. They are perennial here in Georgia.
Lantana a weed, it can ge a weed in my yard anytime. I will be putting all these flowers in my small raised bed gardens this year. I love salvia, its beautiful!
I want to visit! I would spend hours walking around the flower beds and taking pictures. Lantanas are perennials in Alabama. They're one of my main go-to plants for the heat, clay, and gorgeousness.
You have such a good personality and attitude! I live in mid-southern north carolina, zone 8a- So it gets incredibly humid and hot here during the summer, and there's ton of red clay here- I was wondering what would be good perenials to help ward off mosquitos?
Love your show!! Wonderful information for me to know. I'm new at this, and your info will help me know what I can plant together...say a prayer I can get this small garden going.
Hello Mr. Smith, I absolutely love you channel and I look forward to learning a lot from you. My husband and I just bought a 5 acre and home around Louisville, Kentucky. I love so many different flowers and like you I'm trying to go with just perennials. I have so many catalogs and I am finding that I want and love all the colors of the color spectrum. Is there a rule of thumb that your not suppose to have that many different colors in your garden? Or is it o.k. to have the full spectrum. I really want a beautiful garden but I don't want it to look odd with all of the colors that I'm wanting. Should I stick to just 2 or 3 colors for my garden. Thank you and I look forward to hearing from you.
i gave up growing nasturtiums (Kansas) because they are a magnet for some kind of green worm that show up on the underside of the leaves. I finally just gave up over the years.
I have a question about hydrangeas. The hydrangeas that you get around Easter time with the coloured foil around the pot, can those be planted out in the garden?
I’m in south Mississippi, zone 8a, my lantana dies back but comes back every spring. It self-mulches when it gets cold and is in part-shade. I really should cut the dead limbs back in winter but it has gotten so large. Just wanted people to know.
I am what they call "MESSY GARDENER". If I find an empty spot in my garden, I would stick a plant in there and I prefer perennial pollinating plants. When we built our home, my mother bought 2 Limelight hydrangeas. Every time they bloom, the flowers are so huge that they'd flop on top of the other plants. How can I fix that issue? Thanks in advance.
Congratulations, we have selected your question to be featured in an upcoming vlog, coming June 7th. As a thank you from us, we would like to send you a gift. Please email us at allenanswers@pallensmith.com and we will be in touch. Thanks!
Hello Sir Smith i got Hydrangea as a gift last mothers day just wondering are they just fine on tbr pot or do i need to plant them on the grounds?thanks so much and more power!
I really love this video because I have hard clay soil, zone 9 so, it gets very hot Southern California). Currently planting a steep hillside that's approximately 400sq ft. This video has been invaluable as I REALLY don't want to grow ground cover in this area. Thank you for reminding me that I can use some of the perennials in your example - keep the butterflies and hummingbirds visiting my backyard!
Oh, you must mean a slope! That is so cool! You can terrace it a bit and plant grapes at the top, and certain kind of roses below, so beautiful!
Im So CA too. Bearded iris, buddleia. Lavender and the small rose Drift kind do fabulous! We added 2 mimosa trees for dappled shade on the big slope. The plants and wildlife flock there daily.
@@MissDeb-jq6nz it IS a slope -thank you 😊. So far I have a mess due to my indecision and "garden trials" This area gets blasted with full sun. So far, drift red roses and butterfly bush are my top faves. I'm removing everything else as it looks too chaotic. Thanks for the comment.
@@jillspady6450 your idea is wonderful. I already had the spreading red roses on the slope. Also, I recently planted a butterfly bush and the two together look AMAZING Those two jewel tones are incredible together!
Perhaps I will try lavender, rosemary and roses out front. I don't know much about Iris plants, but willing to learn as long as I get visits from colorful pollinators!
Thank you for sharing your garden ideas with me.
@@mamabear9509 find an iris group near you. They are sooooo easy. Plant them shallow, backs in the sun, don't over water, divide every 4 to 5 years.
And be sure to watch for early, mid and late bloomers to have spectacular beauty for up to 2 months, then it's time for the roses.
And don't forget salvia! And gladiolas!
Salvia is wonderful. Hummers, bees, long color. Can't beat them!
Thriller, filler, spiller is the greatest thing I’ve heard in years!
He has an excellent turn of phrase.
And to prune out the 3 D’s Dead, Damaged and Diseased. Also he didn’t mention but you want to prune out any branches that cross and rub against each other or inward towards the center; usually trees and shrubs.
I love that P. Allen Smith has always been vocal about being organic. If only we could get commercial landscapers to do the same.
We need more Q&A shows P Allen! Loved this show and always love perennials!
Another valuable video packed with useful information delivered with personality and humor. Thanks P. Allen Smith
Rosanna Rosanna Lantana 🤣🤣🤣. You are dating yourself Allen. I hope I can make a trip back to Moss Mountain this year. Your gardens are so beautiful and they by far beat my local botanical gardens.
Trumpet vine is considered a noxious invasive plant in my area but the ruby throated hummingbirds love them and may have co-evolved in the Midwest with the trumpet vine and its range.
"...and you can see that I've absolutely lost my mind and have planted them everywhere" lol!!!!! I can 100% relate. I have a small yard in Fruita, CO and ive got the neighbors wondering about my sanity. They jokingly ask what im going to plant next 😅
you are such a good teacher. Thank you for using your gift to teach us!
I love this guy! Today was my first time I saw his vlog and I don't watch pbs except when Downton Abbey was on, but I will absolutely watch this fella! I learned more about gardens, both flower and vegetables gardens today then in years. He is easy to understand and his voice is easy on the ears!
No love for flower snobs. That snobbery usually covers many topics.lol....you rock P
Don't know if it'd be possible, but would love a video about flower garden design/layout. Have a new house and flower beds and would love to know what considerations go into plant choice and placement. Either way, thanks for all the videos and knowledge :)
Jeri Landers The Storybook 'Creating a Cut flower garden' goes into a bit of detail in garden bed design. Would love to see more of planting schemes too.
Your videos are some of the best on RUclips 😁 Always informative with wonderful doses of comedy, thank you P. Allen Smith. Subscriber watching from Derby, UK.
CARLOS SANTANA IS A LIVING LEGEND !!! HE IS THE GREATEST MAN ON EARTH !!! I LISTEN TO HIM EVERY NIGHT I WORK !
My mother said that when she was little, she heard the ladies call the pink and yellow lantana, ham and eggs....😁
I love lantana!!! And, I love you and your videos!!!!
Please keep your VLOGs coming! This one is so timely for me. Received my lavender from GHW yesterday and I'm planting them today. Going to try them in ground in a dry area. Lantana does beautifully for me and is worth replanting it each year since it's not hardy to my zone. And love, love, love the sun coleus. They performed great last year. Best quote, "I don't know if I'd look this good if I went through the winter outside." LOL
My Nanny had a Lantana in her front yard, she cut it back every year, because it came back on new wood. She had it for over 50 years old. It was huge and just gorgeous. Pink orange,yellows.
There are some salvia that are perenial i the N zone 5. where it can get 20 below for wks. . I can't name them off the top of my head. But I have one that came back this yr..
Man!! I just want that house and all of those flowers..Omg so beautiful!! 💗💗💗
I love little STELLA!!! I have them everywhere in my gardens...
Me too, i just divided my Daylily and planted in 3 spots in the garden.
My momma used to say that "A weed is only a weed if you don't want it in your flower bed! If you do want it,well then, its a strong grower or easy to grow or very hardy perenial!"
I am a new gardener and I’m learning so much. You touched on something that I have just figured out. In some parts of the country perennials can be annuals. I think I’m in one of those areas in zone 7A. So many flowers and plants just come back every year.
You cracked me up with this one! You were extra spicy haha Thanks for so many helpful tips. I'm planning a huge new bed this year and need all the help I can get! 🌸😂
Hi from Winnipeg Canada! Zone 3 here🥶 my Salvia comes back every year. Mulched with a bit of compost , watered before freeze up in mid October , then fine bark mulch. I grow those lovely Lilies too. We get snow usually at the end of October so evergreens are important for winter interest.
Excellent video, full of great advice. Another plant attractive for hummingbirds is sweet peas; they keep coming every day. If I may add a tip for growing lavender in a humid climate, if you want to have them in the ground, plant them in a mound, so that water drains easily and the roots don't stagnate.
Great tip!
Hello! I remember watching P Allen Smith on PBS as a little girl with my mom as she transformed our backyard in Brooklyn. Now I am watching these shows in quarantine on YT as I transform my side yard and back yard ! Thank you for this wonderful advice on perrenials! Love from Portland OR!
I love my beautiful lantana...comes back every year in a rounded corner of my flower bed...gorgeous every single time...butterflies love it.
Here's an idea for a companion plants, I planted two Don Juan roses this will be their second year this coming spring, I have morning glories that I planted under the trellis as well they are white I think the white and red contrast will look awesome and I realize that morning glories can be an invasive plant but I will harvest the seeds before they fall , have a good gardening spring next year!
We live in central SC and discovered the cigar plant last summer. As you said the hummingbirds love it! For the winter the man who helps us in the yard removed it from the pot and "buried" it about 3 or 4 inches beneath the surface of the ground. I rescued it in early Spring and guess what, it survived and is growing beautifully back in the large pot!
My daylilies and Sylvia's came back every year in Northern Illinois.
lolol Rosanna-rosanna lantana ! I love it!! Here in southern arizona Lantana is like honeysuckle back east. Its got its own agenda and will grow regardless of what you do. I have sadly found a way to kill it thought... watering toooooo much. Having got it right with my 3rd plant this time, I have that gorgeous pink/lemon species in a 20 inch clay pot that will dry out faster than the plastic ones, and it has done very well. Thank you for this video Allen !
lavender ...”We’ve talked about this before”. ... like a teacher lol
Great video very informative for a new allotment owner a few laughs thrown in as well. 😎
My salvia has returned every year since I planted them a few years ago in zone 7b.
That’s wonderful, I love mine as well and they have reseeded themselves and now I have extra plants to plant in my backyard 😀😀
I think this is the part of P. Allen Smith I like best. I love the companion planting ideas. Thank you for this informative video. 🌿
You are the most knowledgeable man
It's the best explaining of plants, I am in Zone 5 and have a lot of deer crossing thru my yard and munching
I love perennials and volunteer in the perennial garden of our local botanic garden. I am keeping an eye on my in-ground, yellow lantana because I am not sure if it survived the snow and freeze of 2021 in North Texas. I also had purple lantana in a pot, which I lost.
A friend of my son's ask me about my flowers, she says they're always so pretty, and if I had any advice. I sent her your video from today and told her that she needs to watch P Allen Smith. 😁
Love salvias with zinnia and lantanas. Will have to find the hummingbird plant.
Lavender! Love your videos.
I am learning so much about perennials and color contrast. Thanks!
Thank you! A very informative video. I love all flowers. I love perennial and annual combinations. I'm like a kid in a candy store come spring. I have so many ideas and you are right you never know until you try. Last year I planted marigold seeds in some cobalt blue containers in July ...I know very late but my idea was to have a display come fall and it worked! It was a beautiful combo the blue of the pot and the orange of the marigolds, although there weren't as big as the ones I had planted earlier they were still a beautiful display come fall.
Thank you so very much for this wonderful and educational video!!! Gardening in zone 5.
I really like your attitude about experimentation. I never snub growing anything, I'm just cautious. Living in zone 6, I guess I've let myself be too careful; because I hate to see a plant struggle to death. I have been successful with plants that were recommended for warmer zones, and they've flourished. You've inspired me to be more experimental. How I miss living in the south, all the same!
Love all your videos! I’ve learned soooo much about gardening! Thank you!
I live in NY. near the Great Lakes and I have many Peonies and never thought about areas that can't grow them. I planted mine 14 years ago and would not move south and leave them behind. However I understand how others might feel about their area not being suitable for them, since I want Crape Myrtles but it is a bit too cold for them here. By the way, I just subscribed.
Oh my! Thank you! I was looking for something to go with my peachies pick stokes aster and I have two Miss Huff waiting to be planted somewhere. 😍 Perfect Thank You! Also for helping me in my duh phase with my hydrangea that rarely blooms.
Hello, love your videos , I look at your videos in Bristol England UK.have enjoyed gardening for years ,
Plant anything in my garden , as I love plants, am lucky growing most plants, my garden makes me feel
happy and free.getting difficult but will continue for as long as I can eighty six years .Wish I had this
Lovey hobby years. ago.yours Edna
I love your "rants"!!!
I'm in Va. now, but grew up in Louisiana. Down south, Lantana is a perennial and can grow into a huge shrub. Definitely not a weed.
My mother used to call them ham and eggs plants.
All this time I thought you were in England 😂
Loved seeing over views of your fabulous property.
I'm in southern Indiana and building my number of perrenials in my organic, no dig, cottage garden that has no grass to mow any more.
Love your program ❤️💕💗
Ms Pat
I love daylilies. Never seen a double form before and they will definitely feature in my garden. As for zinnias, they are super pretty. Grew them last year and will always grow them now.
I love watching your shows... they could be longer and that would be great!! I watch different shows and I think yours is my favorite! I’ve learned a lot!! Thank you!
Awesome video. I truly like all the information and inspiration coming from PAS. I would love to see a longer video on a topic because you are one of the best. Thank you.
I adore your videos. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
Love this when he said most of the plants are killed by OVER LOVE!
😂 your commentary is awesome. Great video!
I've enjoyed this video so much.I'm in zone 7 and plant only perennials that are tough.To my delight my pineapple saliva has made a come back! My heirloom southern roses are blooming and to my great shock my David Austin English rose is starting to bloom(I did a ton of amendment to the soil and am giving it partial shade)and my bare root trumpet vine is alive!My hummingbirds will be so happy as well as I.I have taken the attitude that only plants happy here in the southern Appalachians with our difficult clay soil will be in my garden.
A tip i use for my 60 Austins.... do a deep water for amazing results. Put the tip of the hose at the base of the bush. Turn it on, barely a trickle, where you can almost not tell waters coming out. Now leave the hose there and on For at least a day, 2 is better. Move to the next rose. The waters directs their roots deeper where it's cooler and the water is. Ive given this advice to my rose grower neighbors.
You'll be amazed!
I have a hummingbird that stops by my butterfly bush daily. Putting a cigar plant in my wishlist ASAP! Thank you for showing us these gems! 🐦🌸🌱
Sounds like a plan! You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
You have definitely opened my eye to being able to grow edible flowers for show and cooking with. The info you have been giving me , I know I can grow pretty much the same as you there in a zone 8, I am here in zone 7b (N.E. Tennessee) .Thank you 💖🙏
Wonderful and informative. Thank you for walking me through your gardening style.
Thriller, Filler & Spiller. Easy to remember!!
I’m definitely going to do some companion planting in two large containers on my patio. I love this video conversation. I love daylilies because the beauty makes me feel like an accomplished gardener even though I’m more of an advanced beginner. I have a question about how to feed them throughout the year
Allen great show,thank you for sharing and thank you very much for introducing me to GILBERT H. WILD AND SONS a good company. I am having fun ordering on line I cannot go to the nursery at this time.🙂
Well, I just found out why my peonies here in central Texas didn’t do much...I planted them too deep. Thanks for the encouragement to try things naysayers have discouraged me from trying. Do you think I can dig them up and try again? Or are they a lost cause? Planted last spring and they never emerged. 😭😭😭
What are your thoughts on the sweet almond verbena shrub.. I’m in zone 9B south of Houston… I think I want to keep it in a container because it smells so lovely… I’m concerned about putting it in the ground it might get too big… I have very heavy clay soil. I heard that it only wants morning sun
Love your show! I live in North Alabama for the bearded Iris do you cut back the long stem after they stop blooming in the spring.
Buttermilk for soaking seeds! Who knew!
Thanks for posting! Love your videos
This was great. I am trying to learn how to plant my first perennial garden and found your show. I can’t wait to tell all my friends about your show and to watch more. Thank you.
Patrcia White yes! Please do. We did a multi-part series on perennials one my Vlog. We’re also sponsored by one of the largest growers of perennials www.gilberthwild.com. Go check them out. They always have great deals running.
Do the Stella daylilies need to be deadheaded to make them re-bloom? I love daylilies too! My favorites...
No. But deadheading keeps them from going to seed and might give your more blooms because energy would be directed to blooms and not seed growth. I grow them.
How about talking bout Hollyhock culture. It has been my passion but I’ve never successfully grown them. Thanks .👌
Wow...this is a video I needed! Thank you for your insights and encouragement to experiment. 😍
I have a camellia bush it had big huge pods this winter but they didn't bloom until now I do not understand why Todd's didn't burst out in the winter thought they always have please tell me if my tree is sick because I do not want to lose it I love it
For us ranchers in Fl, its toxic to the cows,, I think that's why we are taught it is a weed,, but I love it in my garden..
I have Mary Todd day lilies and lots of zinnias that I save seeds from every year. Love them! I've ordered 3 Lucious Bananarama lantanas. They are perennial here in Georgia.
Love all these plants !
Lots of information, thanks for sharing from Ontario, Canada 👍
Lantana a weed, it can ge a weed in my yard anytime. I will be putting all these flowers in my small raised bed gardens this year. I love salvia, its beautiful!
I want to visit! I would spend hours walking around the flower beds and taking pictures. Lantanas are perennials in Alabama. They're one of my main go-to plants for the heat, clay, and gorgeousness.
Great video! Very informative and gave me a couple of new ideas... 😜 Hope to see more videos of your favourites soon!
You are right! I love my plants to death! Never had an indoor plant!
You have such a good personality and attitude!
I live in mid-southern north carolina, zone 8a- So it gets incredibly humid and hot here during the summer, and there's ton of red clay here- I was wondering what would be good perenials to help ward off mosquitos?
Xenpurgisnacht Thank you! Lemon grass, lavender, marigolds, rosemary and even garlic has been known to help with those pesky skeeters.
Hello P Allen why did iris not bloom this year. I have a couple hundred and maybe 10 bloomed. Should I don't vide and cut down to 6 inches or so
Love your show!! Wonderful information for me to know. I'm new at this, and your info will help me know what I can plant together...say a prayer I can get this small garden going.
Hello Mr. Smith, I absolutely love you channel and I look forward to learning a lot from you. My husband and I just bought a 5 acre and home around Louisville, Kentucky. I love so many different flowers and like you I'm trying to go with just perennials. I have so many catalogs and I am finding that I want and love all the colors of the color spectrum. Is there a rule of thumb that your not suppose to have that many different colors in your garden? Or is it o.k. to have the full spectrum. I really want a beautiful garden but I don't want it to look odd with all of the colors that I'm wanting. Should I stick to just 2 or 3 colors for my garden. Thank you and I look forward to hearing from you.
Also, how do you keep deer from eating all of your roses, lilies, and other flowers? Thank you
i gave up growing nasturtiums (Kansas) because they are a magnet for some kind of green worm that show up on the underside of the leaves. I finally just gave up over the years.
Oh yeah, I’m in Little Rock, planting day Lillie’s.
Thank you for sharing this awesome video.🙂
Love all the lillies
I have a pink lavender it is beautiful.
I’m going to. Plant those around my little fountain
I buy a lantana in a nursery and it's doing great is very fragant and can't wait for the butterflies to come to my garden 😁
So nice and beautiful to look at
Omg 😮 the garden is just stunning
Loved your Rosanna Rosanna Lantana. I got it. Never mind!!
I have to look up each plant for landing instructions. Full sun or full shade??
I have a question about hydrangeas. The hydrangeas that you get around Easter time with the coloured foil around the pot, can those be planted out in the garden?
Yes Indeed. As can your Easter lillies
Sharon Browne yes of course
I’m in south Mississippi, zone 8a, my lantana dies back but comes back every spring. It self-mulches when it gets cold and is in part-shade. I really should cut the dead limbs back in winter but it has gotten so large.
Just wanted people to know.
I am what they call "MESSY GARDENER". If I find an empty spot in my garden, I would stick a plant in there and I prefer perennial pollinating plants. When we built our home, my mother bought 2 Limelight hydrangeas. Every time they bloom, the flowers are so huge that they'd flop on top of the other plants. How can I fix that issue? Thanks in advance.
Tie it up- ( loosely). You can also get hoops - they have pointy ends that go into the soil & the hoops open up so you can support heavy branches.
@@Cenepk101 thank you! I will try that method
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Hello Sir Smith i got Hydrangea as a gift last mothers day just wondering are they just fine on tbr pot or do i need to plant them on the grounds?thanks so much and more power!
What happens if someone cuts off the plants before they bloom. Can I save it if I dig it up and put it in my flower beds