| | #1 |
| Moderator ![]() ![]() |
since the women seem to be the flower gardening experts (that aint sexist. thats the way it is) we have had heavy frost already. and my flower garden is brown and about 3 feet tall. can i just take a weedeater to it down to where it is still green? the short plants will stay green for a long time yet.
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: 16th state.
Posts: 2,293
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If your plants are perennials & are done blooming for the year, go ahead & prune them to about 1/2 feet above the ground (although I will prune them to where they just stick out of the ground)...if they are late bloomers (late summer & into fall), & if you still get pretty warm days, then you may want to cover them at night with something like old sheets, towels, etc. to keep the frost off.
__________________ In GOD I do trust! "Today's Forecast: GOD reigns & his son shines!"~Author unkown |
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: new york (not the city)
Posts: 431
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trim 'em down, mulch with leaves or straw (if you can find it) I used to do that with my flower beds (the leaves) it gets them out of the lawn.
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| | #6 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: Kannapolis North Carolina
Posts: 121
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| | #7 |
| Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: central texas
Posts: 26
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pour gas on them and light em up
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| | #8 |
| Moderator ![]() ![]() |
i cut em down and let em rot along with any cottonwood leaves that fell there. the first sweet williams are blooming! i love those. they are so pretty.
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Parker, CO
Posts: 3,298
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Hey man, you're single....you can do any damn thing you want!
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| | #10 |
| Moderator ![]() ![]() | yeppers i had a hard packed dirt spot in front of my house. dug it up and threw wildflower seed all over it. water it once in a while and let it go.
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| | #11 |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 10,919
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I'm just here to cheer you on Billy.No advice,no sympathy,just a strong solumn cheer. sam.
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| | #12 |
| Long Tail Squirrel Hunter Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: Central Illinois... Middle of Nowhere
Posts: 1,305
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Cutting back perenials with a weedeater is def a single guy way to go! I have worked in greenhouse and garden industry much of my life, but still leave the flower choices to the wife! Although once we get em' its my job to keep everything she chooses alive and plant in proper locations! Ya cant go wrong with the wildflower patches Billy. They are easy on eyes, low maintenance and look like you meant do something. Always a good choice for a man. I can give you tips but wont wear a skirt and dont call me a lady... my wife will get mad LOL.... of course if I found I camo skirt in my size I may be tempted LMAO
__________________ Most of my life I've spent hunting,... the rest of it I've just wasted |
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| | #13 |
| Moderator ![]() ![]() |
this year i am doing the DARWIN approach to gardening. it is well established. i am just going to let it do whatever it wants. no weeding, no nothing but water.
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| | #14 |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: New York
Posts: 6,936
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One piece of advice from a guy whose wife spent the four day weekend redesigning an area from a patch of pachysandra into a garden: go to your local nursery and buy perennials suitable for your soil and sun conditions. You don't have to buy a lot. Her Imperial Majesty hasn't paid money for flowers or ground cover in a decade. Example: she paid $24 for a variety of hosta with HUGE (like a square foot each) leaves. She bought one of these and waited two years, then divided it. New we have about eight of them growing at various places in full shade. Another example: she bought one groundcover plant that has ivy-shaped leaves but is green and white. That was six years ago and the thing has turned into The Groundcover That Ate Cincinatti. It's choking the hostas out of the front garden, has colonized two garden patches ten feet away and has invaded the gravel walk and slithered out from under the stone border onto the front walk. She just traces each stalk back to its roots and moves it to someplace she wants ground cover. Same thing with a succulent (whatever that is; all I know is you can't eat it and you can't use it to season food) she got from her BFF. She brought home one measly sprig and today we have the stuff in hald a dozen places, including at least three where she never planted it. My contribution to this is to chip all the leaves and winter debris and turn it into humus with an ancient Kemp 5 HP chipper, which is a lot harder to do than it sounds. For some reason, although she understands the theory she can't make a humus pile yield humus properly. Plus which, she's scared of the chipper - well, I am too, but not so much I can't deal with it. I just wish she'd plant at least SOMETHING that was edible! |
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