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What Makes
A
Good
Perennial?
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(I like to run a version of this column every year
because of the continuing popularity of
perennials. It’s a popularity that is well
deserved because of how well perennials perform in
Wyobraska landscapes. But getting the right
perennials for your landscape is important and not
always easy. I hope this column is a reminder for
experienced gardeners and a good first lesson about
perennials for beginners.)
What makes a good perennial?
It can be so confusing--walking into a garden center
and looking at the perennial display. There is
usually a wide assortment from which to choose. The
pictures and the information cards all seem to say
that every perennial is equally good for your
garden. And perennials are all supposed to be easy
to grow. But take five new perennials home and
the chances are good that you’ll only end up liking
one or two. At least one will spread too
aggressively, another will bloom only for a short
period and then seem to disappear for the rest of
the year, a third may seem to struggle in the
location in which you plant it.
The key to being successful
with perennials is to understand that all perennials
are not created equal. While it may be true that
every perennial has a garden spot somewhere for
which it is perfect, not all of those perfect garden
spots can be found in Wyobraska. So the real
question is “What makes a good perennial in
Wyobraska?”
Here are six qualities that I
have found that make for a “good” Wyobraska
perennial. |
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Previous Articles
A
Loooooong Winter
March 10
Just Dirt
March 18
Horse Manure & Hot Air
March 25
Mulch
to do this Spring
April 01
Creating Long Term
Tree-lationships
April 15
Spring Blooming
Shrubs & Trees
April 22
New
and Improved
Nebraska Arbor Day
April 29
A
Normal Spring
May 6
The Winter of Eight Moons
May 13
Adding Style to your Landscape
May 20
Adding Style to you
Landscape Part 2
May 27
Summer School
June 3
Signature WyoBraska Plants
June 10
It's Time to Fertilize Trees
June 17
A Prairie Garden Walk
June 24
Care of Weather Injured Trees and Shrubs
July 1
2009
Articles
2008 Articles
2007 Articles
2006 Articles
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1. Good perennials
stay under control (more or less).
In a garden or
landscape setting this means that a good perennial
doesn’t reseed and volunteer too aggressively nor
does it spread too quickly via its root system.
Good perennials know their place in a garden and
stay in it. This information usually won’t be found
on the plant tag—so ask the garden center staff or
do a little research on the internet before you go
shopping.
2. It will bloom sometime
between June and September.
Wyobraska has the
perfect climate for most summer blooming
perennials—warm, sunny days with cool evenings. My
suggestion is—don’t fight it. Look for perennials
that bloom in the months of June, July, August, and
September.
3. It will be more than 12
inches tall.
Gardeners and
homeowners are often afraid of perennials that get
big. But many of the best perennials for Wyobraska
are prairie wildflowers that had to get tall in
order to compete with tall prairie grasses for
sunlight. Another reason to think big is that
perennials are increasingly being used to replace
small and medium shrubs in the landscape, and the
shorter groundcover-type perennials just never grow
tall enough to do the job.
4. It should retain an
attractive appearance before AND after it
blooms.
Many of the
traditional spring perennials are notorious for
disappearing after they finish blooming. That
leaves a big hole in your garden or landscape for
the next three seasons. One easy way to get a
perennial that has a long period of effectiveness is
to select at least some that bloom in late summer or
early fall. These perennials often begin growing by
late spring and add their interesting foliage to the
garden all summer before blooming in late summer.
5. It will retain some
visual interest in winter.
It is
a good idea to consider what your garden or
landscape will look like in winter when you plant
more perennials, because in Wyobraska, winter is a
long season. So you will want to remember that
there are a number of perennials that continue to
offer visual interest in a garden or landscape well
into the winter season. Again, it is the larger
perennials with thick stems that tend to hold up to
the snow and wind of winter without breaking. Of
course, most ornamental grasses remain attractive
well into winter and I think they should be a part
of most perennial plantings.
6. It should have
attractive foliage as well as an attractive flower.
A good perennial
contributes foliage interest as well as a pretty
flower to a garden scene. In fact, with certain
perennials such as ornamental grasses and hosta, the
foliage is the primary reason for using the
perennial.
My list of
(some) good perennials for Wyobraska
|
Name |
Flower Color |
Bloom Time |
Height x
Spread |
Comment |
|
Penstemons |
Pink, red,
purple |
June +
rebloom |
18-24” x 12” |
Reblooms if
deadheaded, many cultivars, all good |
|
Purple
Coneflower |
Pink |
July-August |
24-30” x 12” |
Try the new
ones |
|
Russian Sage |
Blue |
August-Sept |
30-36” x 24” |
Attractive
light green foliage in early summer |
|
Coreopsis |
Yellow |
June-Sept |
12-18” x 12” |
Several good
cultivars, all are long-blooming |
|
Daylillies |
Yellow,
orange, pink |
Jnue-July |
12-24” x 24 |
Varieties
vary in color and size, all spread slowly,
easy to grow |
|
Rudbeckia |
Yellow |
July-August |
18” x 12” |
Dependable
perennial, spreads slowly |
|
Liatris |
Purple spikes |
August |
24” x 12” |
Distinctive
flower spikes |
|
May Night
Salvia |
Dark Neon
Blue |
June +
rebloom |
18” x 24” |
Great early
summer perennial |
|
Fall Asters |
Red, pink,
purple |
August-September |
12-30” x
12-24” |
Many
cultivars-try one of thesePurple Dome,
Alert, Alma Potschke, Red Star, September
Red |
|
Yarrow |
Red, yellow |
June +
rebloom |
18-30” x
24-36” |
Very durable,
spreads, but can be controlled—good
perennial for harsh sites |
|
Tall Sedums |
Rusty Red |
August-September |
18-24” x 18” |
Attractive
foliage in summer, fall bloomer, with good
winter interest |
|
Hosta |
Purple, white |
July-August |
18-24” x 24” |
A dependable
foliage perennial for shade |
|
Little Blue
Stem |
(Grass) |
|
18-30” x
12-24” |
Beautiful
maroon color in fall and winter |
|
Hardy Pampas
Grass |
(Grass) |
September |
6-10’ x 3-4’ |
A show
stopper |
|
Feather Reed
Grass |
(Grass) |
August |
30-36” x 24” |
Seed heads
form in July—at its best in August &
September |
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