Top Yellow and Orange Flowering Annuals for Your Garden

Gardeners choose the plants carefully when planning their garden.  Yellow flowers are very popular for bringing a bright, sunny splash of color to the yard.  The following yellow flowering annual plants are great choices.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Celosia

This popular yellow and orange flowering annual comes in two main varieties.  There is the cock’s comb type that has flame or feather shaped flowers in bright yellow and orange, and the crested variety whose flowers look rather like brains.  They like full sun and will flower all summer.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Chrysanthemum

While there are many varieties of mum that will bloom every year, the annual variety is more delicate.  It has lacier foliage and soft, lemon yellow or white flowers.  Like all chrysanthemums, the annual flowering variety enjoys full sun.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – California Poppy

Poppies are great annual flowering plants that gardeners love.  They can grow up to two feet tall and have broad, papery looking flowers on tall stems.  California poppies come in bright orange and yellow colors.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Sunflowers

If you have a lot of room in your garden, you might like to plant the yellow flowering sunflower annual.  Sunflowers bloom late summer to early fall and have yellow to orange blossoms.  Some can reach heights of ten feet.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Mimulus

Mimulus is also called Monkey Flower and is a hardy annual plant.  Mimulus have low bushy mounds of bright green leaves.  The flowers are red, orange, and yellow mottled with funny monkey faces on them.  Gardeners love to plant these in full sun or partial shade.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Marigold
One of the most popular orange and yellow flowering annuals is the marigold.  There are varieties that grow from six inches up to three feet tall, with a wide range of flower colors and styles.  All marigolds enjoy full sun in your garden.

Yellow and Orange Flowering Annual – Nasturtium

This yellow and orange flowering annual plant is another garden favorite.  The plant actually helps repel insects from your garden.  The plants can grow anywhere from eight inches to ten feet tall and have masses of orange and yellow flowers.

Planting yellow flowering annuals in your garden is a great way to add visual interest.  These sunny flowers are favorites to many gardeners.  The annual plants will grow for one year and add beauty to your yard.

Written by MelanieM

More Flowers Garden Articles

Top Seven Blue or Purple Flowering Annuals for Your Garden

Top Seven Blue or Purple Flowering Annuals for Your Garden

Gardeners plant a wide variety of plants in their gardens.  Perhaps the most colorful and vibrant of all the plants are the annuals.  Annuals grow and bloom for one year and then die back in the fall and winter.  They often have showy blossoms.  This article covers five of the best annual plants with blue or purple flowers.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Ageratum

Ageratum is sometimes called the floss flower, and sometimes called the blue jean flower.  Its flowers range from bright purple to a bright blue.  Ageratum is an annual that enjoys light shade.  It flowers from early summer until the first frost.  This purple annual flower grows in mounds and is great for your garden border.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Browallia

This purple annual flower is a favorite in my own garden.  The flowers range from deep, vibrant purple to pure white.  The small spreading plants are covered with the violet-shaped flowers.  Like most annual plants, it blooms from spring until frost.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Heliotrope

This annual plant is not very hardy, but is perfect for protected, sunny spots in your garden.  Helitrope has attractive dark green foliage and masses of small purple flowers.  Heliotrope is actually an evergreen shrub and can get up to two feet tall.  Due to its delicate nature, however, it is often considered an annual garden plant.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Morning Glory

The morning glory is actually an annual vine that self-seeds readily in your garden.  The morning glory comes in white, pink, purple, and perhaps the truest blue of all flowers.  This vine will climb over everything in its path and is often considered a weed despite its beauty.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Lobelia

Lobelia is another garden plant that is actually a perennial but is grown as an annual in most gardens.  It is a low-growing plant with small leaves and masses of small purple flowers.  There are also pink and white varieties.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Forget Me Not

This diminutive plant is often found growing wild near streams, but is planted in the garden as an annual.  The plant rarely gets over 8-10 inches high and prefers partial shade.  The flowers of the forget-me-not are bright blue with yellow and white centers.

Blue or Purple Flowering Annual – Torenia

Torenia is a tender annual that enjoys partial shade and moist soil.  It has bright purple viola type flowers that bloom from midsummer to fall.  It is also called the wishbone or monkey flower.

Choosing one of these beautiful purple or blue toned annual plants for your garden is a great idea.  These cool tones will provide a sense of peace and tranquility to your garden.

Written by MelanieM

Look who it is. Lots-o’-Huggin Bear has joined Buzz Lightyear and Woody at this year’s Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival. As Debbie shared earlier on the Disney Parks Blog, we’ve debuted several new topiaries based on characters from Disney-Pixar classics, including the “Toy Story” and “Cars” films. And here’s a new look at how our latest character was added to the park. Read more at the Disney Parks Blog: bit.ly

Find More Flowers Garden Articles

Tips For Maintaining Your Flowering Gardens

Article by Ted & Sandra Wosko

Help in maintaining your flowering gardens

Want to know some tips on getting a healthy,blooming and well maintained flowering gardens. Read on and learngood insider tips and advice.Our tips are aimed at gardeners of all standards, whether you are the serious gardener or the potter around the garden type of person, to be rewarded with wonderful flowering gardens.

Our aim is to help and guide you throughout the seasons of the year. giving you relevant information on what is happening in your garden at that moment, and what you should be doing to achieve the best results for your efforts.This is one of the best times of the year, watching your garden wake up from its hibernation,getting ready for its endless toll of bursting out in bloom and spreading its aromatic scents that dance around the garden tantilising your nostrils and senses, lifting your sprit and making you feel like a million dollars The wonder that is nature has sprung.This time of year is one of the busiest parts of the seasons, now that winter has become a distant memory and spring has officially arrived. Plants and trees are bursting into life from there dormant state, being fed on the ever increasing rise in temperature from the suns rays. What a wonderful sight to watch the garden awake from its slumber to start its yearly ritual, bringing us a never ending explosion of colour and to fill the air with its wonderful aromatic scents.Giving daily changes for us to discover, as we walk admiringly round our gardens.

It is only fair that that we repay the flowering plants, shrubs and trees for their tireless work they are about to embark on over the coming months by giving them the best care we can. This does not have to mean a great expense of money or time.

Try the following easy tips for your flowering gardens

Walk round and prune off dead, broken and damaged stems.Do the same for any trees also raking up any fallen twigs.

Replace any dead plants (making sure they actually are dead and not still dormant)

Remember, Just the effort of dead heading flowering bulbs achieves a tidier garden and the bulb improves as the energy goes into enlargement instead of setting seed heads.

Hoe the garden to loosen the soil and remove any weeds

Add Fertilizer to feed the plants (But make sure its not to cold or wet and that the ground has started to warm up)Chicken pellets are a good all round general fertilizerPlants like Rhododendrons and azaleas will need feeding with an acid based fertilizer

For great flowering gardens summer bulbs and corms need planting now.Remember to dig your holes wider and deeper than required to allow you to add a 50/50 mix of compost and sharp sand which will help to get the best out of your bulbs and improve your flowering gardens.

We must not forget about some lawn care as this is some peoples pride and joy, and even comes before plants.

This is the best time to scarify the lawns ready for the onslaught of the summer months.What this means is you should be removing everything that is not grass such as moss and weeds.This is best done by using a lawn or spring tine rake or if it is a large area you can buy or hire a scarifyer. (well worth it )The easiest way to clear the mess up is run the lawnmower with a collector on over it.As a side note – make sure you have cut the grass and it is dry, if not you could start to tear it out which is not very clever.

This is also the right time to aerate your lawns after scarifying.This means you open up the ground to allow the soil to breath and allow water to penetrate.Over the winter period the ground gets compacted with all the wet and people walking on it.This is done by sticking a garden fork into the ground and penetrating the surface by up a couple of inches. You stand on the fork and move it back and forth if it is really hard. You then move forward a couple of inches and repeat the process, try to get in a rhythm and it will make it easier. When you reach the other end, turn round, move over a fork width and come back.(Wear good leather boots and do not jump on the fork as this could damage the sole of your foot)Again you can purchase or hire a push along or motorised aerater

Do not weed and feed your lawn at this point until your lawn has time to recover about two or three weeks time. Also you should not feed your lawn until the frosts have gone and when you do, make sure you water it in if it dose not rain within a couple of days. (try not to walk on it until the fertilizer has dissolved as this can cause brown patches)

Till the next time enjoy your flowering gardens

Ted & Sandrawww.theaudiodownload.comwww.thetalkingbooksite.comwww.learnturnandearn.com

This article was composed by Ted and Sandra Wosko of A-Z Landscapes & Contract Services Ltd.We run a very successful uk based landscaping family company. We have some blue chip companies as our clients and been retained by them for several years. We have been acknowledged for helping companies achivetheir environmental compliance standards.http://wwwaudiobookdownload.comhttp://wwwthetalkingbooksite.comhttp://wwwlearnturnandearn.com

Related Flowers Garden Articles

The Art of Growing and Showing Many Garden flowering Plants.

Article by Trevor Dalley

In My Latest Book Published Recently,

“HOW TO MAKE MONEY FROM YOUR GARDEN”.The first chapter is entitled How to do it all for free. There I endeavour to instil in the minds of the uninitiated that gardening, so far at least as it is concerned with the cultivation of plants, is not so difficult as many articles and books would have us believe, and a strict observance of elaborate detail has gained quite an over exaggerated theme.

I wrote this article with some misgiving, but considering how directly it’s teaching is opposed to the trends of gardening as usually interpreted, it has met with far less criticism than expected. It is true that in some instances I was taken to task for daring to argue my points against the principles that have been under discussion for many years. But on the whole I was agreeably surprised to find that many reviews were very good.

I feel that if it were necessary to protest against the downright and nature in a book that endeavours only to point out some of the ideas in gardening and the way to their attainments, it requires me to offer words of encouragement to amateurs in such a book as HOW TO MAKE MONEY FROM YOUR GARDEN.

In dealing at length with such an inexhaustible subject as gardening and in giving practical details of cultivation, one naturally endeavours to point the way to perfection.

Thus it is an easy matter to make things appear more difficult than they really are. In fact, gardening work is actually far simpler than it appears to be in many gardening magazines, for in trying to make himself thoroughly understood the writer is apt to insist on this and that, whereby if they were carrying out the work there self they would without doubt achieve the objective by a far more simple and direct method than that which is recommended.

A frequent stumbling block to the amateur is found in the preparation of growing mediums, or composts, as they are termed. Yet it is surprising how large a number of plants may be grown in flower pots with three ingredients, namely, peat, perlite or sand and a slow release fertilizer.

If proof were wanted of the needlessness of such elaborate as is often advised, it might be seen in any garden centre or nursery. There the plants are grown for sale, and naturally they must be well grown or they would never sell. How rough and ready are the methods employed! Yet how satisfactory are the results.

One might readily show further how wasteful and unnecessary is the procedure often used, for frequently one gardener uses a different soil mixture from his neighbour, and in growing the same plants both achieve most excellent results! And so I expand to say that an amateur gardener following still another and less complicated way is also likely to achieve excellent results.

This principle holds good throughout garden practice. Therefore where in the following blogs I seem to advise an impossible method-impossible, that is, in the special circumstances existing for obtaining ideal results, let the reader try methods that are possible in his case, and most probably he will not be disappointed.

Then the conditions do vary greatly in different gardens, and condition of soil, climate, aspect, ect, these exert an important influence on plant cultivation. One grower finds that a plant thrives best on a north facing border, another grows it best on one facing south, and so on. Both may be perfectly correct in their treatment of the plant, but each would be wrong in advising that there special method was the best and the only right way of cultivation.

A case in point occurred in the growing of that great favourite, the Garden Pink. I have over the years grown many of these lovely plants, some were grown on a border facing west, others on land facing east, and they all seemed quite satisfactory.

Only the other day I received an email/article from a gardener who grow most excellent Pinks, to judge from the photo received, but, strangely enough, he insisted that the only place where they would thrive to perfection was in the open garden, exposed to all the elements.

Garden Pink growing at once becomes a puzzle, and the aspiring amateur may well give it up, especially if the only border he has is one that faces north. But, believe me, he might grow very good Show Garden Pinks even there!

So I would say to those who do not know yet are trying to find out the truth, if your gardening text book says that the only place in which to grow your favourite flowers is a north facing border and you do not posses one, put them on the south facing border and see what happens.

Nothing very dreadful most probably, for you can be fairly certain that if you search long enough some writer would be found expressing an exactly opposite opinion to that which first came to your notice. In truth, plant growing is such a vast subject, on which all sorts of local conditions exert an influence, that it is foolish to lay down direct rules for the cultivation of any plant out of doors and even, in a lesser degrees, under glass, since cases proving exactly the opposite to one’s fixed opinions might undoubtedly be found.

All of which would seem to prove that gardening books are worse than useless. This is hardly the case, but it is true that they can never hope to do more than guide the thoughts of the gardener. They will assist, with hints, they might describe the methods which are most likely to succeed, they can tell the grower when to do things and this is of the first importance but they cannot logically lay down rules for the governance of plant growing.

No one can make the most of their garden until the capabilities and limitations have been discovered.

If you wish to read more please Click here to visit For Free.

Trevor Dalley has been growing Fuchsias and Chrysanthemums for sale to the gardening public commercially for the last 30 years Click here to visit For Free.

Find More Gardening Books Articles