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Selecting Location for Annual Flowers
A well planned site could yield beautiful results
Success with annual flowers, or bedding plants, begins with
the proper selection of the planting site and the annuals that
you choose to grow. Few annual flowers grow well in heavily
shaded areas. Exceptions are Coleus, Begonias, and Impatiens
or Sultana, as you might know them. Make sure that your
choices are adapted to the light conditions in your home
grounds or patio, deck, or balcony.
The soil…
The soil in flower beds must be carefully and thoroughly
prepared if you are to be successful. Lightly scratched or
shallowly dug flower beds will probably grow a few plants.
However, the plants will be spindly and weak with sparse
flowers. Such a planting will not reward you for your efforts.
On the other hand if you prepare your planting beds as
carefully as you do for shrubs or bulbs, your results will be
more outstanding. In order to grow good desirable plants, it
is usually necessary that the soil be thoroughly spaded,
plowed or rototilled to a considerable depth—no less than
6" and preferably to a depth of 8" 10". At the
same time if your soil is extremely heavy, such as a red clay,
it will be necessary to go further. Add 1" - 2" of
coarse sand and 3" - 4" of organic matter such as
peat moss, manure, leaf humus, or pine bark. Work these
materials uniformly into the soil.
The drainage…
If your selected location is low to the point that surface
water does not readily drain away, it would be wise to raise
the bed higher than the surrounding ground. The addition of
a small amount of fertilizer to the planting bed will be
helpful. For 100 square feet of bed, use one to two pounds of
a general purpose fertilizer such as 8-8 8 or 10-10-10. Mix it
thoroughly into the soil. If manure is used as organic matter,
omit the fertilizer at planting.
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