Transform your home into a flourishing garden with the Most Productive Vegetables for a Balcony and Patio Garden, ensuring a plentiful yield in limited space and enhancing your green thumb experience.
29.06.2023 - 00:57 / gardenerspath.com / Lorna Kring
How to Lift Dahlias for Winter StorageWhen you start growing dahlias, it’s impossible not to fall in love with their remarkable flowers.
These tender perennials are easy to cultivate, and they put on a fantastic display of glorious blooms from early summer until they are felled by a hard frost.
And after cold weather settles in, it’s time to dig up and remove the tubers for winter storage, to plant out again in spring.
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Lifting and storing is a simple process, but there are a few important steps to ensure you have healthy, vibrant tubers for spring planting.
Keep reading here to learn all about how to store dahlias.
A Dahlia PrimerNative to Mexico and Central America, the Dahlia genus boasts over 40 species available for the home gardener.
Members of the Asteraceae family, like asters and sunflowers, these highly ornamental plants put on a long-lasting display of stunning flowers from early summer until frosty temperatures set in.
They make lovely, vibrant cut flowers and with the right care, will last a long time in a vase.
As tender perennials, they’re hardy only in USDA Hardiness Zones 8-11.
In Zones 7 and below, they must be treated as annuals. That is, the tubers need to be dug up in autumn, stored for winter, then divided and/or replanted the following spring for another round of stunning summer flowers.
In regions with mild winters, they can stay in the ground. But they do have an intense dislike of wet feet, and even those that are growing in warmer areas – particularly those with wet winters – benefit from an annual lift and division.
If they are left in the ground over winter, the tubers multiply and grow into
Transform your home into a flourishing garden with the Most Productive Vegetables for a Balcony and Patio Garden, ensuring a plentiful yield in limited space and enhancing your green thumb experience.
Heathers are low maintenance, drought-tolerant and hardy-winter plants. They are easy to grow and features wonderful colorful flowers year-round. Keep reading this article to learn how to grow heathers in pots.
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When the late season garden starts to fade from summer’s heat, dahlias are one of the best choices to add delightful months-long displays of brilliantly colored blooms.The timing of these flowers is perfect!From July until t
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This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Knowing when to harvest garlic can
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. You may have a lack of p
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Courtyard Garden in Fife Scotland! well, its really part of our drive sectioned off. Take a look, see if it qualifies.