CHAPTER V

Previous
Flowers that come up Every Year by Themselves (Perennials)
No, the heart that has truly lov'd never forgets,
But as truly loves on to the close;
As the sunflower turns on her god when he sets
The same look which she turn'd when he rose.
Moore.

That big word ARISTOCRACY simply means "those who rise above the rest of the community in any important respect,"—and rightly, indeed, are the perennials called "the aristocrats of the garden." They are strong and sturdy (good points in both people and flowers), and can be depended on to appear about a certain time, make us a nice visit with all their loveliest clothes, and show their appreciation of our attention and care by returning every season with increased beauty and grace.

A few of the perennials, such as the peony and the iris, grow so slowly that generally people haven't the patience to wait for them to flower from seed, and instead try to get some roots from their more fortunate friends, or buy from a florist. But I will tell you more about this class in connection with the bulb and tuber families.

THE SEED BED

While a small number of these beauties will bloom the first year if started early in the spring, most of them make their dÉbut in garden society the second summer. Before that they have to be watched, or they might meet with accident. A good way, therefore, is to have a little bed (preferably a cold frame) for a seed nursery off to one side, in a safe place, where the baby plants can be cared for, protected from cold, and tended like the infants they are, until grown up and old enough to enter the society of bed or border. In such a place the seeds should be planted in fine, rich soil, preferably from the middle of May to the 1st of July, and all carefully marked. Sow thinly, and then cover the seed by sifting over with fine soil from 1/8 to ¼ inch deep. Sprinkle very lightly by means of a whisk broom dipped in water, so as not to wash out the seed, and if you possibly can, cover with a piece of glass. Keep in the shade at first, and never let dry out. Some of this seed will germinate in less than a week, while some may take so long that you will think it is not going to grow at all! But don't give up; and maybe some day when you have forgotten all about it, you will discover a lot of new babies in your nursery.

TRANSPLANTING PERENNIALS

As soon as your seedlings are big and strong enough to be handled, they must be carefully lifted and set in another part of the nursery, not less than 3 inches apart, protected from the hot sun, and left until they become strong, sturdy children. Then early in the fall, before the middle of September, you can take them up very gently, without disturbing their tiny rootlets, and put them with their friends and relatives in the garden, wherever you wish them to bloom the following summer.

Of course you couldn't,—and you wouldn't want to grow everything you ever saw or heard about! Just think of the fun, however, of picking out a small number that will be sure to give you flowers, one after another, from earliest spring until cold weather! Yet the following list, suggested by one authority, is easy to get and little trouble to care for:

PERENNIALS FOR A WHOLE SEASON'S BLOOM

Creeping Phlox (Phlox subulata); white, rose, lavender; bloom April and May.
Lily-of-the-Valley (Convallaria majalis); white; May, June.
Bleeding Heart (Dicentra spectabilis); rose pink; April through June.
Iris (Fleur-de-lis); white, purple, yellow; April to July.
Peony (PÆonia officinalis); white, rose to crimson; May, June.
Larkspur (Delphinium); blues; June, July, September.
Balloon Flower (Platycodon); blue, purple, white; July to October.
Phlox, Hardy (Phlox paniculata); no blue nor real yellow; June through September.
Golden Glow (Rudbeckia laciniata); yellow; August.
Blanket Flower (Gaillardia aristata); yellow, red; July to October.
Boltonia (Boltonia latisquama); lilac; August to October.
Sunflower (Helianthus); yellow; July to October.

Photo of dog in front of flowers KIM AND COLUMBINE

The fault that I would find with the gentleman's list is that he has omitted chrysanthemums, which could be substituted for sunflowers to most people's satisfaction,—and which also would bloom as late as November. Also I should prefer columbine to his bleeding hearts,—and the golden-spurred variety will bloom from early May to early August! Above all, instead of boltonia, I would use the adorable snapdragons, which, although considered a "tender perennial," will survive cold weather if well protected.

But then, as I once heard, "A man's garden is like his wife, whom he never would think of comparing with anybody else's." So you don't have to follow any one's choice. Just make a list of the flowers that you like, find out when they bloom, and then choose as few or as many as you have room for, remembering to plan for something lovely every month of the blooming season.

One note of warning, however. After you have made your list, consult some friend that is a successful gardener, and make sure that what you have chosen will thrive in your particular locality. If you find it does not, strike it off, and put in something that will.

FLOWERS THAT COME UP EVERY YEAR BY THEMSELVES

A GUIDE TO THE COMMON PERENNIALS

Note.—A few of these will blossom the first summer, if started early. Also, some varieties of the same plant will flower in the spring, others in the fall. Make sure which kind you get.

Name Color Height Sow
Indoors
Sow
Outdoors
Good for Place Blooming
Season
Alyssum (Alyssum saxatile) Rich
yellow
1 ft. May
June
Rockery
Edging
Half
shade
or sun
April,
May
Anemone, Japanese (Anemone Japonica) Rose
White
2 to
4 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Half
shade
or sun
Sept.,
Oct.
Aster, Hardy (Aster NovÆ-AngliÆ) White
Pink
Lavender
Purple
2 to
5 ft.
May
June
Anywhere Shade or sun Aug.
to Oct.
Baby's Breath (Gypsophila paniculata) White 2 to
3 ft.
May
June
Rockery
Border
Sun June,
July
Balloon Flower (Platycodon) White
Blue
1 to
3 ft.
May
June
Border Sun July to
Oct.
Begonia, Hardy (Begonia Evansiana) White
Pink
Rose
1 to
2 ft.
May
June
Border Sun June
to Aug.
Bellflower (Campanula) White
Blue
1 to 3 ft. May
June
Border Sun June,
July
[E]Blanket Flower (Gaillardia aristata) Red
Yellow
3 to
5 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun July
to Oct.
Bleeding Heart (Dicentra spectabilis) Pink 2 ft. May
June
Border
Bed
Likes
half
shade
May,
June
Boltonia (Boltonia latisquama) Lilac 2 to
6 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun Aug.
to Oct.
Candytuft, Hardy (Iberis sempervirens) White 6 to
12 in.
May
June
Border
Edging
Sun April,
May
Chrystmas Rose (Helleborus niger) White 12 to
15 in.
May
June
Border Half
Shade
Dec. to
March,
outdoors
Chrysanthemum, Hardy No blue 2 to
3 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun Sept.
to Nov.
Columbine (Aguilegia) All
shades
2 to
4 ft.
May
June
Rockery
Bed
Sun May
to Aug.
Coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata) Yellow 1 to
2 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun June
to Oct.
Daisy, English (Bellis perennis) Pink
White
3 to
6 in.
May
une
Bed Sun April
to June
Delphinium (Delphinium to formosum,
D. Belladonna, D. Chinense)
Blue to
white
2 to
6 ft.
March May
June
Border
Bed
Sun June,
July,
Sep.
Oct.
Cut down
after each
flowering
Flag, see Iris
[F]Forget-me-not, Perennial (Myosotis palustris) Blue 6 to
18 in.
May
June
Border Shade
or sun
May to
fall
[G]Foxglove (usually biennial) (Digitalis) White
Purple
Rose
Yellow
3 to
5 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Half
shade
June,
July
Fraxinella, see Gas Plant
Gaillardia, see Blanket Flower
Gas Plant (Dictamnus albus) Rose
White
2½ ft. Long
lived
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun June,
July
Golden Glow (Rudbeckia laciniata) Yellow 6 to
8 ft.
May
June
Back of
border
Sun July
to Sept.
[F]Hollyhock (AlthÆa rosea) All
shades
4 to
6 ft.
May
June
Back of
border
or bed
Sun July, August
Iris White
Purple
Yellow
Maroon
1 to
3 ft.
May June Border
Bed
Clump
Sun May
to July
Larkspur, see Delphinium
Lupin (Lupinus) White
Blue
Pink
Yellow
2 to
5 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Clump
Sun or
half
shade
May,
June
Madwort, see Alyssum
[E]Mallow, Musk (Malva moschata) White
Rose
1 to
2 ft.
May
June
Border Sun or
shade
July
to Sept.
Michaelmas Daisy, see Aster
Monk's-hood (Aconitum napellus) Blue to
white
3 to
5 ft.
Slow to
start
May
June
Poisonous Sun or
shade
July
to Sept.
Moss Pink, see Phlox subulata
Mullein Pink (Lychnis coronaria) White
Red
1 to
3 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun June,
July
Myosotis, see Forget-me-not
Myrtle, see Periwinkle
Pansy (Viola tricolor) White
Blue
Yellow
Purple
6 to
8 in.
March April
May
Border
Bed
Sun or
half
shade
All
summer,
with
care
Peony (PÆonia officinalis) White
Rose Crimson
3 ft. Slow grower May
June
Border
Clumps
Sun or
half
shade
May,
June
Periwinkle (Vinca minor) Blue
White
6 to 10 in. March May
June
Trailing
vine
Shaded
bare
spots
All
summer
Phlox, Perennial (Phlox paniculata) No blue
or
yellow
2 to
3 ft.
Slow May
June
Border
Bed
Sun Aug.,
Sept.
(Phlox subulata) White
Pink
Lavender
2 in. May
June
Carpeting
Border
Sun April,
May
Pink, Grass (Dianthus plumaris) White
Vari-colored
1 ft. May
June
Rockery Border Sun May,
June
Platycodon, see Bellflower
[E]Poppy, Iceland (Papaver nudicaule) White
Red
Yellow
1 ft. April
May
Border
Bed
Sun June
to Oct.
Poppy, Oriental (Papaver orientale) Scarlet
Orange
to pink
3 ft. March
April
Border
Bed
Sun June,
July
Pyrethrum (Chrysanthemum coccineum) Whit
Rose
Crimson
3 ft. May
June
Border Sun June,
July
[E]Rocket, Sweet (Hesperis) White
to
purple
2 to
3 ft.
May
June
Border
Clump
Sun June
to Aug.
Rockmadwort, see Alyssum
Rose Campion, see Mullein Pink
Rudbeckia, see Golden Glow
Sage, see Salvia
Salvia (perennial) White
Blue
2 to
4 ft.
May
June
Border
Bed
Sun May
to Sept.
[F]Snapdragon (Antirrhinum) No blues 1 to
3 ft.
March May 1st Border
Bed
Sun Jun
to Oct.
Sunflower (Helianthus) Yellow 2 to
8 ft.
May
June
Back of
border
Sun Sept.
to Nov.
[E]Sweet William (Dianthus barbatus) White
Pink
Maroon
1 ft. May
June
Border
Bed
Sun June
to Aug.
Tickseed, see Coreopsis
[G]Wallflower(Cheiranthus cheiri) Yellows
to
browns
and
purple
1 to
2½ ft.
May
June
Rock
garden
or
border
Part
shade
May
Windflower, Snowdrop (Anemone sylvestris) White 1 to
1½ ft.
May
June
Clump
Border
Part
shade
or sun
April
to July

FOOTNOTES:

[E] Will bloom the first year from seed sown in March.

[F] Perennial in the South, but should be grown annually in the North.

[G] Really a biennial.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page