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Patio Gardening
Patio Gardening
Q. I recently moved into a rental house
out in the country with very little shade.
I have a container on my patio table the
kind in which the green patio umbrella fits
through and would like your opinion of planting
the container with white snowball marigolds
and zinnias (if I can find them at the greenhouse/nursery
in Missouri). Does this sound feasible or
are there better selections out there which
you would recommend? There is no deck porch
or overhang roof on this house.
A. This location and climate sound very good for your choices. Lucky you to have all that sunlight for gardening. I grew up in pretty near total shade
so I could grow forest plants except in the rear where I filled the ditches with sun-loving flowers and vegetables! Marigolds and zinnias love lots of sun. They came from Mexico and are used to dry
hot conditions. So if you can find the plants you desire
I recommend that you go for it. Plant them in a good sterilized garden soil with just a little perlite and vermiculite added. Consider applying some slow-release fertilizer like Osmocote. The little beads break down in the moisture and gradually release food for the plants. Make sure that you clip off dead and wilted flower heads to keep these annuals from going to seed. This will prolong your blooming season right up until frost! Once an annual sets seed it signals that life is over because its task was accomplished
to propagate more baby plants the next season. Yes even these seeds will sometimes survive harsh winters and sprout the next spring
but I always prefer to plant new seed or buy established 6 packs of plants for faster starts.
With the protection from your umbrella
you can shade the plants later when the
sun is unbearably bright and hot. This will
keep the plants from wilting and needing
so much water especially if you go away
for awhile.
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