Unpretentious and drought-resistant flowers for the garden. Alpine asters are a drought-resistant perennial for a flower bed in a sunny location. Video “Sun-loving hosts”

Painting 14.07.2020
Painting
Flower garden of sun-loving perennials:

Under the sun's rays, perennials bloom with special splendor and beauty. The choice of their species and varieties is large enough so that every gardener can find plants of the color, shape and flowering period that suit him.

The best places for many abundantly flowering plants are open to the sun.

Here such noble long-flowered flowers as lilies, peonies and phlox can show themselves in all their glory. They tolerate short-term daytime shade quite calmly, but longer shading and even openwork shade from trees and shrubs seriously affect their prosperity.

Large, lushly flowering breeding varieties of sun-loving perennials are especially sensitive in this regard. For them, the most optimal are ridges with fertile and sufficiently moist soils.

The design of sunny areas depends entirely on your taste and, of course, on the actual capabilities of your garden. Small flower beds in the front garden can be designed no less impressively than a ridge stretched along a garden path, a “ribbon” of perennials along the border of the garden, or a flower island in the center of the lawn.

In any case, it is very important to skillfully combine plants according to their growth. Such tall and lush-flowering crops as rosemary, mallow and lupine are most advantageous in the “far” section of the flowerbed. Their flower stalks will rise above the shorter crops in the foreground, which in turn will cover the bases of their shoots.

We offer you an approximate diagram of a flower bed with perennials:

1. Miscanthus - Miscanthus sinensis.


2. Annual three-cut malope, or hole - Malope trifida.


3. Hybrid yarrow variety - Achillea "Schwefelbluete".

4. Campanula lactiflora.

5. Perovskia wormwood - Perovskia abrotanoides.

6. Annual hybrid of verbena - Verbena.

7. Sedum-squeaky, or hare cabbage - Sedum telephium (before flowering).

9. Foxtail featherweed - Pennisetum alopecuroides (before the appearance of flower stalks).

10. Louis's wormwood - Artemisia ludoviciana.

11. Hybrid variety of yarrow - Achillea "Lachsschoenheit".

12. Hybrid shrub aster - Aster dumosus (before flowering).

13. Hybrid coreopsis - Coreopsis.

14. Fassen's catnip - Nepeta fassenii "Six Hills Giant".

15. Himalayan geranium - Geranium himalayense.

16. Annual fragrant tobacco - Nicotiana.

17. Santolina chamaecyparissus.

Of course, you can replace some flowers with your favorite ones, because this is an approximate option... and you can extend the flowering season in a sunny flowerbed with the help of such attractive autumn-flowering crops as sedum, garden chrysanthemums or autumn asters.

Most perennials will bloom again in the fall if they are pruned in a timely manner after the main flowering period. Such plants include delphinium, stenactis, catnip And scabious.

The choice of spring sun-loving perennials is somewhat smaller. They bloom in April rezukha, meadow lumbago And Adonis. They are joined in May day-lily, catnip And peony.

You can enrich your spring palette with such bulbous plants as narcissus,tulip And grouse. Since bulbous crops become unattractive after flowering, they should not be planted in the foreground of garden beds.

An easier-to-maintain option for a large flower garden is a sunny lawn. Wild perennials - cornflower, yarrow,meadow sage- thrive here in colorful company with herbaceous plants. Such lawns are sown with a special seed mixture or individual crops are planted on an existing lawn.

Examples of compositions from sun-loving perennials:

Cascades of flowers

Thanks to a well thought out fit geranium, sedum and mantle receive the same amount of sunlight as tall mallow(Malva sylvestris) in the background.

Warm colors of autumn

Delicate and soft palette echinacea purpurea(Echinacea purpurea), helenium hybrids(Helenium) and chamomile asters(Aster amellus) is simply amazing!

Beautiful sun-loving perennials

Delphinium- large-flowered perennial with long candle-shaped inflorescences; supports are desirable; re-blooming after pruning. The erect peduncles of spurs, densely strewn with bells, are spectacular in any corner of the garden.

Phlox paniculata- long-lasting large-flowered perennial with dense pin-shaped peduncles; re-blooming after pruning. A pleasant aroma and lush floral appearance make phlox one of the most popular garden crops.

Rudbeckia- an unpretentious large-flowered perennial with basket-shaped inflorescences; produces root suckers; pruning increases the flowering period. If you provide rudbeckia with enough space, it will gradually form dense flower thickets.

Bush aster- an abundance of star-shaped inflorescences above dense dark green foliage; good ground cover plant. The warm lights of the autumn bush aster (Aster dumosus) glow in the garden until October.

Catnip- long, arched shoots with numerous small two-lipped flowers; loose bushy growth. It is not difficult for him to find company. Regular pruning maintains the compact shape of the bush.


Oriental poppy (Turkish)- large cup-shaped flowers of luminous color; short flowering time; spreads by self-seeding. It is loved for the freshness of its bright flowers and the expressiveness of its seed pods.


Heliopsis- A hardy, large-flowered perennial with sunflower-like inflorescences on long, straight stems and long-lasting flowers.


Lavender- a compact, long-living perennial with evergreen pubescent foliage and fragrant flowers. Thanks to its woody stems, lavender is classified as a subshrub. She is very good in borders.

Day-lily- large-flowered perennial with star-shaped or bell-shaped flowers; grows to the size of a large bush.


Gaillardia- attractive multi-colored ray-shaped inflorescences on strong stems; Protection from cold weather is recommended.

Sources: vk.api; solnce-generator.ru

BEAUTY IN THE FLOWER FLOWER!!!


Your LYUBASHA BODIA

If your site is not shaded by plantings, is well lit by the sun, and has light, sandy loam soils, then drought-resistant plants will feel best on it. They grow well in the sun, easily tolerate a lack of moisture in the soil, while maintaining a decorative appearance. Their assortment is quite large, and compositions with sun-loving and drought-resistant plants can be very diverse.

Essential ground cover

First of all, drought-resistant plants include numerous ground cover or cushion-shaped “alpine” perennials for rocky gardens. They are usually short (15-35 cm), form dense, growing clumps, and thrive in bright sun. Light, well-drained soils are suitable for alpine growth.

Rejuvenated(m. roofing, m. cobwebby, m. scion, m. hybrid) form compact rosettes of shortened and pointed thick leaves of green or purple color. In summer they bloom with rather large flowers on long stalks of yellowish-white, dirty pink, and red flowers.


Numerous varieties sedum They are also sun worshipers. They form extensive clumps, blooming from June to August with small yellow, pink, white, orange, crimson flowers collected in loose inflorescences. Sedums have a variety of leaf shapes - pointed, oval, round. They can be colored green, purple, yellow, and have a white border along the edge of the leaf. The most popular are: o.bent, o.caustic, o.Eversa, o.Kamchatsky, o.false, o.rocky, o.white and many others.


Heat-resistant plants include a variety of varieties carnations- grasses and carnations are grayish-blue with bluish stems and leaves with simple or double flowers of white-pink or raspberry-red colors. They form “cushions” up to a meter in diameter and require pruning after flowering.


In spring, white and pink arabis turn into colored “mats”, phlox subulate with white, pink, lilac, purple flowers, aubrieta (lilac and dark pink color of flowers), sunny yellow rock alyssum.


Alpine aster, which belongs to the dwarf shrubs, blooms in June with simple flowers of pink, lilac, and white colors.

Quite drought-resistant and sun-loving different kinds short bells with blue, white, purple flowers: K.Carpathian, K.Oshe, K.spoon-leaved, K.Holmovoy, K.Gargansky, K.Portenschlag, K.Pozharsky.


The common one blooms in July with small lilac flowers, attracting large numbers of bees and bumblebees, spreading in vast clumps. If you step on plants, the air is filled with a pleasant aroma.


Yaskolka tomentose with white star flowers and whitish-gray foliage is capable of covering large spaces, as it forms underground stolons.

Sun lovers

There is a fairly large assortment of medium-sized perennials, flowering and decorative-leaved, which prefer a sunny location and easily tolerate a lack of moisture in the soil. They usually reach a height of 40 to 100 cm. These plants can form small clumps or occupy large spaces.

There are many varieties of heuchera - plants that form compact rosettes of rounded or jagged leaves in green, purple, yellow, and silver colors. Such rosettes have a height and diameter of about 30-40 cm, and peduncles with small red or white small flowers collected in brushes rise to a height of up to 60 cm.

Some sedums (o.prominent, o.tenacious) form rounded bushes 40-60 cm high with bluish, bright green, variegated (white with green), purple foliage, blooming in mid-summer and autumn with pink, purple, yellow, white flowers , collected in flat inflorescences.

A variety of colors look impressive decorative bows .

Most of them are true sun worshipers. These are dwarf (not higher than 30 cm) Moli onions with yellow waxy flowers and Ostrovsky onions with dark pink inflorescences, Karatavsky onions with wide leaves and dirty pink spherical inflorescences, blue onions with bright blue heads, Christophe onions with huge lilac balls of flowers (up to 20 cm in diameter).


Liatris spicata has spike-shaped inflorescences of lilac or white flowers 50 cm high and in July decorates the middle plans of flower beds.

The famous edelweiss, a symbol of the Alpine mountains, forms a low, loose rosette of silvery stems with whitish flowers.

Some drought-tolerant plants can grow very large and occupy large areas in flower beds. Perennial sage with bright blue flowers tolerates drought well and decorates compositions with flowering flowers for a long time.

Yarrow (cultivated varieties and wild species) forms entire thickets of stems 60-70 cm high with yellow, pink, purple and white flowers collected in flat inflorescences.

Anafalis is a low plant (about 40 cm) with silvery stems and leaves, has white flowers with a yellow center, similar to yarrow. Various wormwoods (for example, Steller's p. and others) have different leaf shapes and heights, but usually have silvery foliage.

Tolerates sun and drought well.

Among the annuals that love a sunny and dry location, we can name alyssum seaside, Iberis umbellata, purslane grandiflora, mesembryanthemum crinumoflora, hybrid gatsania, salvia (annual species and varieties), seaside cineraria, pinnate celosia, californian eschscholzia, globose gomphrena, notched kermek.

Among the shrubs, various types of spirea and chaenomeles (Japanese quince) are considered the most sun-loving and drought-resistant, but with a lack of moisture they quickly fade.

Buy seedlings of ornamental plants>>

Most conifers (with the exception of thujas) prefer a sunny and dry place. The most hardy trees are pines, horizontal juniper and other blue spruce species.

No matter how good your neighbors are, you still don’t want to be under their supervision around the clock. And the chain-link mesh, you must admit, is unreliable protection from prying eyes. Therefore, several years ago we changed it to a fence made of metal profiles. Of course, I wanted a wooden one, but it turned out to be very expensive. At first I was upset, even cried a couple of times, then I came to terms with the circumstances and even managed to find a positive moment - now my clematis will have reliable protection from the cold eastern winds.

This was true in winter, but summer came, and with it a problem. As I had feared, the blank metal surface became so hot in the sun that it was impossible to touch. My flower garden began to rapidly lose its decorative quality. Clematis suffered the most - they grew almost close to the ill-fated fence. I saved them in every possible way: I mulched the soil, watered them more often, gave them a shower - nothing helped. From once luxurious plants, they instantly turned into pathetic, almost non-flowering shoots. I could barely wait until autumn that year to replant the vines exhausted by the heat.

But how to replace them, how to quickly decorate a problematic structure? I really didn’t want to see lifeless iron every day. The search began for more hardy plants suitable for landscaping the problematic flower bed. The first candidates were, and. They have been growing on my plot for several years now, so I know that they cannot be called sissies. True, the first two vines are quite aggressive; if you hesitate, they will spread all over the flower garden.

The choice fell on the mountaineer: it has no root shoots, is unpretentious, gives a very large increase over the season (and I really wanted to hide the profile behind the foliage as soon as possible) and looks very attractive. And, I must say, I did not regret my choice. In two years, a wonderful living screen was created that almost completely hid the fence.


The knotweed blooms long and profusely - a solid white cloud of flowers! To add bright colors, I sow annual vines next to it in the spring. Last year I was his neighbor, and this year we admired the exotic red and yellow flowers of Mina Lobata. I liked their duet) And the most important thing is that they don’t care much about a nearby hot fence; they bloom for themselves, despite the heat.


Among the shrubs, it turned out to be the most resistant; it tolerates excess sun and lack of moisture in the soil. The three-lobed almond even benefited from the proximity of the fence; under its protection, it stopped freezing in winter and now blooms more luxuriously than before.


In the end, there weren't many plants left near the fence, so I decided to add flowers. Using the method of practical selection, a list of the most “heat-resistant” (as I call them) perennials was determined. - a true southerner who never gets too much sun, and even drought won’t make her lose her attractiveness. Another lover of sunny and dry places is. It doesn’t even need additional watering; it tolerates a lack of moisture better than its excess.


They grow well along the fence, and if they are watered promptly and regularly. And for spring-flowering bulbous plants (,

Long-term observations of agricultural technicians and gardeners allow us to choose the right flowers and plants for sunny places in the garden. Plants need light, air, water and nutrients, which they obtain from the soil. Lack of these essential conditions slows down growth and causes various diseases. An important stimulus that has a special effect on plant growth is sunlight. It provides radiant energy for photosynthesis, which affects the development process of the plant.

Long-term observations of agricultural technicians and gardeners allow us to choose the right flowers and plants for sunny places in the garden

If you experiment and grow a plant in the dark, it will be pale yellow, not green, because it will not accumulate chlorophyll, which absorbs red and blue light from the sun's rays and reflects green. If the plant is not exposed to light and does not begin photosynthesis, it will die. The main condition for the successful germination of seeds of some plants is sufficiently bright light (for example, in petunia). Most garden plants prefer to be in open areas of the garden, others bloom regardless of sunny places, and there are also those that love shade.

A garden cannot be without everyone’s favorite roses and lilies. Sung by poets and composers, they are the main decoration of gardens. The lily is the only flower mentioned by Jesus Christ in the New Testament: “Look at the lilies, how they grow... and Solomon in all his glory was not dressed like any of them...”.

It’s good to make your own collection of several roses and lilies. You can place special pegs with special tags next to the seedlings, attach information about the variety and planting date to the tags; It is advisable to start a garden journal so that you can write down all the necessary information about your favorite exhibits in your garden collection.

There are so many varieties of roses and lilies that they are classified into sections and groups according to certain garden characteristics. The classification of roses, approved by the World Federation of Rose Societies in 1976, divides these flowers into 3 groups: natural species (rose hips), old garden roses (Bourbon, Damask, Chinese, French, Scottish, tea, climbing) and modern garden roses (hybrids obtained by crossing roses of different species, they are distinguished by larger bush sizes, abundant flowering, and better winter hardiness). Roses bloom continuously from early summer to mid-autumn, unlike lilies, whose flowering period rarely exceeds 3 weeks. For planting lilies, it is better to select varieties with different flowering periods.



Currently, thanks to the work of breeders, there are thousands of varieties of lilies. The third edition of the International Register of Famous Varieties of Lilies (published in England in 1982) contains more than 3,200 varieties. Garden lilies in this register are classified into 10 sections. The first section includes Asian hybrids. Tiger lily, drooping lily, pleasant lily - these are species representatives of this section, which have popular, unpretentious, easily and quickly propagated garden varieties. Lilies in their diversity are also distinguished by the relationship of the flower to the stem: with flowers directed up, down or to the sides.

Sun-loving hosts (video)

Sun-loving peony

If the rose is the queen of all gardens, then the peony is called the king. The large peony flowers and the beauty of the plant's original leaves make it special. It is said to be a flower with the scent of a thousand roses. Peonies are grown as herbaceous perennials and tree-like shrubs. Tree peonies are becoming very popular among gardeners. The flowers of these plants have amazing stamens, and the tree peony lives for 100 years. Growing conditions are different: tree peonies need to be planted in slightly shaded areas, unlike herbaceous peonies, which necessarily need well-lit areas.


If the rose is the queen of all gardens, then the peony is called the king

Unforgettable petunia

The beautiful petunia is what really brings joy to the soul with its lush flowering from April to November. And most importantly, it can withstand any scorching sun and is absolutely unpretentious. If the main flowers of the garden are planted in a certain central composition, then a simple multi-flowered petunia can be planted in the remaining places. It traditionally serves as an excellent garden decoration. It is worth planting petunia once, and then it will reproduce by self-seeding, and every spring it is enough to correct its numerous shoots. Petunia is traditionally planted in pots, in hanging baskets, and in all kinds of containers that can be moved around the garden.

Purslane and daisies

In order for the flowers in the garden to look harmonious, you should skillfully select a combination based on the height and shape of the plants. A beautiful composition can be created on a raised flowerbed of variegated purslane, framed by bushes of identical daisies. The name of these flowers comes from the Latin word “portula”, meaning “collar”. Its seed pod opens up as if a small gate is opening to the coming new flowers embedded in tiny seeds. Purslane reproduces by self-sowing and in some European countries it grows unpretentiously as a field weed in damp sandy places, along river banks, in vegetable gardens and fields. And garden varieties of daisies can be grown in any good soil. To prevent them from degenerating, old specimens of daisies are dug up after flowering and divided into several parts for planting.


Chamomiles and chrysanthemums

As do daisies, daisies and chrysanthemums from the aster family. In the kingdom of flowers, these plants have the title of princesses. One of the wonderful varieties of chamomile is called “Silver Princess,” and one of the varieties of white chrysanthemum has the same name. Daisies, despite the simplicity of their flowers, symbolize a happy sunny day. It's nice to watch in the garden how daisies open their petals in the morning in the sun, and in the evening they collect them again into a bud. A bush of garden giant chamomile (scientific name nivaria) grows up to 1 m in height. A fully opened flower from a nevus bud can reach 10-15 cm in diameter. Chamomile pleases with long flowering from the beginning of June to the end of September. The plant loves it very much Sun rays and tolerates drought well.


Flower garden in the sun (video)

Ornamental grasses and small conifers

It is better to grow flowers in the garden together with ornamental grasses, which are used to design and decorate flower beds and give them a special charm. For this purpose, creeping, low, medium and high (reaching 2-3 meters in height) specimens of popular cereal crops are used. These herbs grow well in both sun and shade.


It is good to plant small coniferous trees and shrubs on alpine sunny hills. For the most part, these are light-loving plants. Planted in the sun, evergreen juniper, miniature mountain pine and Korean fir, whose usual habitat is the rocky mountains, grow beautifully and delight with their greenery all year round.

Poppies and tulips, irises and daffodils, crocuses and pansies love sunny places and, if well cared for, become wonderful garden pieces. By creating a garden, a person realizes his dream of a heavenly paradise.

And a little about secrets...

Have you ever experienced unbearable joint pain? And you know firsthand what it is:

  • inability to move easily and comfortably;
  • discomfort when going up and down stairs;
  • unpleasant crunching, clicking not of your own accord;
  • pain during or after exercise;
  • inflammation in the joints and swelling;
  • causeless and sometimes unbearable aching pain in the joints...

Now answer the question: are you satisfied with this? Can such pain be tolerated? How much money have you already wasted on ineffective treatment? That's right - it's time to end this! Do you agree? That is why we decided to publish an exclusive interview with Professor Dikul, in which he revealed the secrets of getting rid of joint pain, arthritis and arthrosis.

Attention, TODAY only!

Then I realized how strong flowers are

They are like tenderness, like love, like children -

Stronger than evil, stronger than anything in the world,

Stronger than death and stronger than war.

Kirimize Jane

Flowers are a decoration for the yard, but they require the gardener to take a thoughtful approach to both the arrangement of flower beds and the combination of plants. In many cases, due to weather conditions, there is not enough moisture, and we, always busy and in a hurry, do not have the opportunity to water the flower beds enough times. Not every plant is able to fully survive in such extreme conditions. But there is a way out, and this way out is drought-resistant plants.

Drought-resistant flowers, herbs and ornamental shrubs thrive even on soils with minimal moisture content and are not at all happy with soil saturated with moisture. If there is too much moisture, drought-resistant plants can become sick or even die.

Of course, site drainage can come to the rescue here. This is a troublesome and costly matter, but without it there is no way. The topic of drainage is the topic of a separate article.

Selecting plants for a dry garden

Annuals

The ease of caring for annuals, their ability to add new colors to the flower garden every year, the most amazing forms and their inexhaustible variety have and will continue to attract flower growers.

Among the flowering annuals, we can recommend the following plants for a drought-resistant garden:

    • Zinnia– an annual flowering plant with a height of 30 to 90 cm. The leaves are located opposite each other, the stem and leaves are rigidly pubescent. It blooms in temperate latitudes from June to frost, the inflorescence is a basket, there are a wide variety of shades, the seeds have time to ripen and do not lose their germination for 2-4 years. Based on two types of zinnias - graceful and narrow-leaved, many varieties have now been bred for growing in flower beds.
    • Rudbeckia- annual or perennial flowering plant. The leaves are oval below, lanceolate above. The flower is a basket with tubular and reed flowers. The tubular flowers form a brown tubercle, characteristic of this species. The flowers are similar to daisies and are usually yellow or orange. The seeds are tetrahedral, small.
    • Cosmos- a tall flowering plant imported from South America. The leaves are twice pinnately dissected, giving the plant an openwork appearance. The flowers are large, on long bare stems, the color ranges from white or pale pink to purple. The seeds ripen very well and reproduce by self-sowing.
    • Decorative types sunflower (Helianthus annuus) – annual tall plant, up to 2.5 m. The leaves are heart-shaped, arranged alternately. The stem and leaves are rigidly pubescent, the flower is a basket with dark-colored tubular flowers and yellow-colored petaled flowers. The seeds are wedge-shaped, smooth, slightly pubescent.
    • Ornamental poppy (Papaver rhoeas) – an annual plant that has many varieties with varied colors. This light-loving plant is planted in separate group plantings on a lawn or flower bed, as well as in a group of different varieties.


Rudbeckia

Cosmea

Decorative poppy

Ground cover plants

These drought-tolerant perennials are low-growing, up to a maximum of 35 cm, and very attractive. Forming dense, growing clumps, they are perfect for alpine hills and rocky gardens. They tolerate bright sun very well. Light, low-moisture soils suit them best. The list of sun-loving perennials can be long:

      • Juvenile (Sempervivum): cobwebby, hybrid, roofing, offspring - they all form dense rosettes of purple or green color. In summer, large flowers of pinkish, yellowish, red colors look impressive against this background.
      • Sedums (Sedum)- amazing variety of shapes and colors. The leaves are yellowish, green, purple. The flowers are crimson, orange, yellow, pink. They bloom from June to August and form extensive thickets.
      • Carnation (Dianthus), well, what would we do without her? Dianthus grass and glaucous, with simple flowers or with terry ones of stunningly beautiful colors - from white-pink to raspberry-red.
      • Arabis- a low creeping plant with rooting stems. Can be annual or perennial. The leaves are pubescent, the flowers are white, yellow or pink, double or not, in inflorescences on a stalk. The fruit is a pod.


Rejuvenated

Arabis

    • Rock alyssum (Alyssum saxatile)- a plant of the steppe hills and mountains of Siberia. A small herbaceous shrub with woody shoots. The leaves are ovoid, heavily pubescent, with a gray tint. The flowers are yellow and form a raceme. It requires calcium-rich soil.
    • Saxifraga (Saxifraga)– a perennial plant with a well-developed root system. The flowers look like a star and form inflorescences. The leaves are thick, with a glossy, leathery sheen, and exude lime along the leaf margins. Thickets of saxifrage form turf covers.
    • Phlox subulata- a plant with recumbent shoots and prickly sharp leaves, forming evergreen turf coverings. It blooms very profusely, flowers of various shades. Grows well on rocky soils, hills and mountainous surfaces.
    • Tomentosum (Cerastium tomentosum)- a herbaceous plant up to 30 cm tall, with white flowers collected in corymbose inflorescences. The leaves are silver-green and have a pubescent edge. Lives in mountainous and hilly areas.
    • Mesembryanthemum- an annual or biennial creeping or creeping succulent up to 15 cm high. The flowers resemble daisies and open at noon. Vitrified cells in the form of dew drops are visible on the top of the stems.


Felt cleaver

Mesembryanthemum

Perennials

The list of drought-resistant perennials can be continued. Unpretentious and hardy, they feel great in the sun and grow well between the stones of alpine hills and rockeries:

    • Wormwood (Artemisia)- a perennial herbaceous semi-shrub plant with a tart, bitter aroma of shoots. The leaves are green to silver-gray, dissected. Flowers are in racemose or paniculate inflorescences, the fruit is an achene.
    • Euphorbia (Euphorbia)- a perennial herbaceous or shrubby plant. In addition to seeds, it reproduces by root shoots. All representatives have a milky juice on the cut, which is very poisonous. The flowers are single or collected in rosettes, the inflorescence is surrounded by some kind of glass.
    • Yarrow (Achillea) –perennial plant with baskets with many flowers, it would be more correct to say “milliflora”. Widely used in folk medicine, stems up to 50 cm high. Yarrow extracts sulfur from the soil and distributes it throughout the area.
    • Lavender– has a wonderful aroma; its purple thickets can beautifully decorate garden paths.
    • Daylily (Hemerocallis)- a plant with tall arrows, at the ends of which there are flowers - has great diversity and is completely unpretentious.


Sagebrush

Spurge

Lavender

Drought-tolerant grasses

Designing a flower garden without herbs and grains cannot be considered complete. From decorative drought-resistant grasses you can plant:

    • Byzantine Chistina (Stachys byzantina)- a bluish-green plant with fluffy leaves.
    • Elimus– another name is grate. An unpretentious herbaceous plant, usually propagated by shoots from the rhizome. The inflorescence forms a panicle, reminiscent of an ear of rye or wheat, and is stored dried on the stem for a long time.
    • Gray fescue (Festuca glauca)- a perennial plant up to half a meter tall. The rhizomes are creeping, the inflorescences form panicles with spikelets, the fruit is a caryopsis. The leaves are lanceolate and can range from green to silver in color.
    • Phalaroides- a perennial grass up to 120 cm high with striped linear leaves. It blooms with spikelets collected in panicles. The leaves don't droop even from severe frosts. Usually, with the help of vegetative shoots from the rhizome, it grows very strongly and can become a difficult weed.


Byzantine chistets

Elimus

Two-source

These herbs will add charm to your flower garden, giving it sophistication and attractiveness.

tall plants

First of all, among tall drought-resistant plants I would like to note decorative bow, mallow. Each of these plants is beautiful in its own way. Double hollyhock flowers captivate your heart with their richness of shades - from burgundy to snow-white. Mallow blooms all summer - from June until almost frost. And these plants grow up to two meters in height.

The decorative onion Allium is not far behind them. Its spherical inflorescences of pink and white shades rise up to one hundred and seventy centimeters.

Drought-resistant shrubs

It is often very difficult to do without ornamental shrubs when building a landscape. Shrubs are the note that makes the garden truly sound, giving completeness and visual completeness to the landscaping of the territory, on which you have put so much of your strength, your imagination, your desire for beauty.

Cossack juniper (Juniperus sabina) out of competition. It does not require additional care and can withstand unfavorable conditions quite well. Attractive, evergreen, one can say about this shrub that if there are charismatic plants, then this is about it. Juniper with its presence brings special charm and beauty to the landscape.

Euonymus (Euonymus)- a beautiful, very bright, even somewhat picturesque shrub. Many of its species are quite drought-resistant. It is difficult to take your eyes off the euonymus surrounded by properly selected low-growing plants. In the summer months, its openwork, dark green foliage attracts, but autumn comes, and the crown of the bush is engulfed in such a riot of colors that you can’t take your eyes off it.

A good example of unpretentiousness and drought resistance is barberry (Berberis). Yellow and bright red leaves adorn the long, thorny branches. Barberry loves the sun and feels great under its rays.


Euonymus

Euonymus

Barberry

What to consider when creating


  • Carefully consider which plants should grow nearby. Under no circumstances should a drought-resistant plant be planted next to a moisture-loving one. It will be very difficult to organize watering.
  • When planting plants, you should establish the correct distance between them. For plants that like to grow too much, root limiters should be used - plant them in containers without a bottom, buried in the ground; the horizontal spread of roots will not be further than expected.
  • Such flower beds should be watered rarely, but abundantly.

Soil moisture plays a big role in the development and flowering of ornamental plants in the garden. But if the location of the site is inconvenient, when the sun’s rays dry out the soil, and it is often not possible to water it, drought-resistant flowers and herbs are chosen for the garden. They will be able to perfectly decorate the site without losing their attractiveness and vitality.

Drought-resistant perennials are numerous and decorative; they will decorate flower beds and garden beds on our site in case of insufficient watering. And rocky hills, rock gardens, and rock gardens initially assume that they will be sparsely hydrated. Drainage is specially arranged there, poor, low-nutrient soils are poured in order to artificially simulate drought, even with an irrigation system. This doesn't make them any less beautiful.

Ornamental crops that tolerate drought easily, or xerophytes, can thrive in poor soils. They love both sun and shade. There is no need to come up with an irrigation system for them; it is enough to add gravel and sand to the ground to drain the soil. Even rare watering of drought-resistant plants will not lead to their death. Layers of mulch made from sawdust, straw, and chopped leaves will help retain moisture.

Designing flower beds with drought-resistant flowers

When creating a flower garden that will decorate the site for many years, it is necessary to take into account a number of points:

  • Place of arrangement. Drought-resistant flowers feel comfortable in depleted soils. But they do not tolerate marshy soils where there is no sufficient outflow of moisture. On waterlogged soils they simply rot and die. Reliable soil drainage is a prerequisite when arranging flower beds. When laying out flower beds, the factor of illumination of the area is also important, because some drought-resistant flowers love sunny areas, while others love shady places.
  • Combination of plants. When selecting compositions, it is important to take into account the conditions for growing a particular species. Plants with different moisture needs may feel uncomfortable in close proximity. And with such a combination of plants, the gardener may have difficulties with watering.
  • Creating conditions for growth. To ensure reliable drainage, a sufficient amount of gravel and sand must be added to the soil. It is advisable to water only in the morning, thereby reducing moisture loss during the day. Plants must be planted at a sufficient distance from each other, leaving room for free growth of their above-ground parts.

Since most drought-resistant plants in nature grow on depleted soils and soils lacking vitamins, when preparing a flower garden it is better to limit the amount of organic fertilizers. The opinion that drought-resistant plants look inconspicuous compared to their sun- and moisture-loving counterparts is wrong. Among the drought-resistant plant species you can find many bright and showy decorative flowers.

Beautifully flowering, drought-resistant perennials are unpretentious in nature and can grow even on depleted soils. Many gardeners love drought-resistant plants not only for their unpretentiousness and beauty. A pleasant aroma always hovers around flower beds with these plants, attracting insects that pollinate the flowers. But even among the variety of beautiful drought-resistant plants, there are clear favorites that, even with insufficient care, can delight with lush, unique flowering throughout the season.

Drought-resistant flowers

They prefer sunny places and are unpretentious to soil. These perennials must be planted at a distance of at least 30 cm, otherwise the plants will shade each other. Cornflower does not require special care after planting and is resistant to pests and diseases. To keep your sunny flowerbed looking neat, you need to remove flowers that have faded.

While other plants are just gaining strength, and the bulbous ones have already faded, Doronicum will delight you from May to June. More than 40 species of this plant are known. The flower adapts perfectly to any conditions, so a sunny flower bed is perfect for planting it. When caring, you need to take into account that the plant has a shallow root system, and be careful when weeding and loosening the soil so as not to damage the perennial.

Lush and bright lupins, which are also planted during this period, are not only unpretentious, but also bloom twice: in June-July and August-September. They can be planted either one at a time or in groups of 2-3 plants, in which case in a couple of years you will get powerful bushes. The root system of this plant is very strong and goes to a depth of 1 meter. It should be borne in mind that the seeds of this perennial are poisonous and it is necessary to cut off the flower stalks in time. But the stems of faded lupine will be an excellent fertilizer for your flowerbed.

Blooms throughout the summer. This plant is deservedly preferred by novice gardeners and designers. After all, when choosing this perennial, you get fluffy green bushes that also bloom profusely. The small petal is a frost-resistant, not capricious and sun-loving perennial.

This herbaceous plant with bright flowers has about 90 species; it can be either erect or hanging. The plant does not require special care, but during flowering it is advisable to provide moderate watering. And, of course, to maintain the well-groomed appearance of your flower bed, you should remove dried flower stalks.

Carnations come in many varieties and colors and are perfect for a sunny flower bed. In addition to the abundance of colors, it also has a pleasant aroma. All varieties of carnations go well with other plants in the flowerbed and are not capricious.

Our mothers and grandmothers grew phlox in sunny areas. Since then, this undemanding, drought-resistant perennial has disappeared from our sight for some time. Today, the fashion for phlox has returned, and many new varieties have appeared, painted in all sorts of colors except yellow.

It's hard to imagine a person who doesn't like irises. Among the many species there are real water lovers, growing right in reservoirs. But many irises are able to grow in sunny areas with virtually no watering throughout the hot summer, while still blooming and delighting the eye with beautiful long leaves.

Peonies belong to the true elite of flowering perennials that prefer sunny places. They are beautiful not only during flowering - their leaves decorate our site until frost. At the same time, peonies can hardly be watered at all; they can be content with rare rains; only in the driest summers additional moisture may be required.

Alpine aster or perennial aster, which is sometimes called “frost” because it blooms until frost, is also very drought-resistant. In addition, today there are many new varieties of various colors and sizes. It is especially good as a border perennial.

Among the many species, we are interested in mountain bells, which are drought-resistant and prefer to grow in sunny areas. Not only their flowers, but also their leaves are decorative.

Some of the most beautiful flowering perennials are daylilies. There are many varieties of different sizes and colors. At the same time, daylilies are surprisingly unpretentious, they are drought-resistant, prefer sunny areas, and their leaves remain decorative even after the flowering period. Now daylily breeding pays special attention to the development of remontant (re-blooming) varieties.

This drought-tolerant perennial is like a little sunshine and always brightens the mood of everyone who looks at it. The size of rudbeckia, depending on the type and variety, can vary from 30 cm to almost 2 m. It will decorate any flowerbed and will not require abundant watering or careful care - for successful growing season it only needs a sunny area

Today on sale you can find many highly decorative varieties of yarrow in a wide variety of colors. It is very unpretentious and the only problem this perennial can pose is that it actively reproduces by self-seeding and can even litter the area. Prefers sunny places and is very drought tolerant.

Echinacea is like a large daisy that comes in colors of red, pink, purple and purple. It is very decorative, and also has unique medicinal properties. This drought-resistant perennial grows in sunny places. Flower size and color vary.

When designing a flower garden, a special place should be given to drought-resistant herbs. The most attractive among them are gray fescue, two-tasseled fescue and elimus.


Such “bumps” look impressive against the backdrop of ponds and rocky gardens. Gray fescue grows best in sunny areas with fertile, well-drained substrate. The decorative grass elymus is also attractive with its pointed bluish-gray leaves.

Decorative trees and shrubs

The beautiful barberry shrub is a clear favorite due to its unpretentiousness and drought resistance. Its thorn-strewn stems, growing up to 1 meter high, are decorated with elegant yellow, pink-brown and bright red leaves. Branched barberry shrubs love the sun, but can also grow in slightly shaded areas. Some varieties of barberry also delight you with edible bright red fruits in the fall.


Euonymus is a bright and unusually beautiful shrub, attractive with its beautiful openwork crown and small, elegant foliage. The pinkish fruits that cover the stems of the euonymus open as they ripen, revealing bright red-orange seeds. Amazing sight! But it is worth remembering that ripe fruits, like all parts of the plant, are poisonous.

The silver oleagin shrub is no less decorative. It feels most comfortable on very depleted soils, enriching and improving them with nitrogen. In place of the flowers, fruits are later set, which by autumn grow into yellowish berries with astringent, sweetish pulp.

Juniper is an absolutely undemanding and unusually beautiful forest guest that has long taken root in suburban areas.


An amazingly beautiful forest dweller, withstanding unfavorable conditions, is capable of transforming any place on the site. It will be an effective addition to a rocky garden, a multi-level flower garden, a mixborder, or a frame for a garden path.

In contact with

Then I realized how strong flowers are

They are like tenderness, like love, like children -

Stronger than evil, stronger than anything in the world,

Stronger than death and stronger than war.

Kirimize Jane

Flowers are a decoration for the yard, but they require a thoughtful approach from the gardener both to the arrangement of flower beds and edgings, and to the combination of plants. In many cases, due to weather conditions, there is not enough moisture, and we, always busy and in a hurry, do not have the opportunity to water the flower beds enough times. Not every plant is able to fully survive in such extreme conditions. But there is a way out, and this way out is drought-resistant plants.

Drought-resistant flowers, herbs and ornamental shrubs thrive even on soils with minimal moisture content and are not at all happy with soil saturated with moisture. If there is too much moisture, drought-resistant plants can become sick or even die.

Of course, site drainage can come to the rescue here. This is a troublesome and costly matter, but without it there is no way. The topic of drainage is the topic of a separate article.

Annuals

The ease of caring for annuals, their ability to add new colors to the flower garden every year, the most amazing forms and their inexhaustible variety have and will continue to attract flower growers.

Among the flowering annuals, we can recommend the following plants for a drought-resistant garden:

    • Zinnia– an annual flowering plant with a height of 30 to 90 cm. The leaves are located opposite each other, the stem and leaves are rigidly pubescent. It blooms in temperate latitudes from June to frost, the inflorescence is a basket, there are a wide variety of shades, the seeds have time to ripen and do not lose their germination for 2-4 years. Based on two types of zinnias - graceful and narrow-leaved, many varieties have now been bred for growing in flower beds.
    • Rudbeckia- annual or perennial flowering plant. The leaves are oval below, lanceolate above. The flower is a basket with tubular and reed flowers. The tubular flowers form a brown tubercle, characteristic of this species. The flowers are similar to daisies and are usually yellow or orange. The seeds are tetrahedral, small.
    • Cosmos- a tall flowering plant imported from South America. The leaves are twice pinnately dissected, giving the plant an openwork appearance. The flowers are large, on long bare stems, the color ranges from white or pale pink to purple. The seeds ripen very well and reproduce by self-sowing.
    • Decorative types sunflower (Helianthus annuus) – annual tall plant, up to 2.5 m. The leaves are heart-shaped, arranged alternately. The stem and leaves are rigidly pubescent, the flower is a basket with dark tubular flowers and yellow petal flowers. The seeds are wedge-shaped, smooth, slightly pubescent.
    • Decorative poppy (Papaver rhoeas) – an annual plant that has many varieties with varied colors. This light-loving plant is planted in separate group plantings on a lawn or flower bed, as well as in a group of different varieties.


Rudbeckia
Cosmea
Decorative poppy

Ground cover plants

These drought-tolerant perennials are low-growing, up to a maximum of 35 cm, and very attractive. Forming dense, growing clumps, they are perfect for alpine hills and rocky gardens. They tolerate bright sun very well. Light, low-moisture soils suit them best. The list of sun-loving perennials can be long:

      • Juvenile (Sempervivum): cobwebby, hybrid, roofing, offspring - they all form dense rosettes of purple or green color. In summer, large flowers of pinkish, yellowish, red colors look impressive against this background.
      • Sedums (Sedum)- amazing variety of shapes and colors. The leaves are yellowish, green, purple. The flowers are crimson, orange, yellow, pink. They bloom from June to August and form extensive thickets.
      • Carnation (Dianthus), well, what would we do without her? Carnation is grassy and gray, with simple or double flowers of stunningly beautiful colors - from white-pink to raspberry-red.
      • Arabis- a low creeping plant with rooting stems. Can be annual or perennial. The leaves are pubescent, the flowers are white, yellow or pink, double or not, in inflorescences on a stalk. The fruit is a pod.


Rejuvenated
Arabis

    • Rock alyssum (Alyssum saxatile)- a plant of the steppe hills and mountains of Siberia. A small herbaceous shrub with woody shoots. The leaves are ovoid, heavily pubescent, with a gray tint. The flowers are yellow and form a raceme. It requires calcium-rich soil.
    • Saxifraga (Saxifraga)– a perennial plant with a well-developed root system. The flowers look like a star and form inflorescences. The leaves are thick, with a glossy, leathery sheen, and exude lime along the leaf margins. Thickets of saxifrage form turf covers.
    • Phlox subulata- a plant with recumbent shoots and prickly sharp leaves, forming evergreen turf coverings. It blooms very profusely, flowers of various shades. Grows well on rocky soils, hills and mountainous surfaces.
    • Tomentosum (Cerastium tomentosum)- a herbaceous plant up to 30 cm tall, with white flowers collected in corymbose inflorescences. The leaves are silver-green and have a pubescent edge. Lives in mountainous and hilly areas.
    • Mesembryanthemum- an annual or biennial creeping or creeping succulent up to 15 cm high. The flowers resemble daisies and open at noon. Vitrified cells in the form of dew drops are visible on the top of the stems.


Felt cleaver
Mesembryanthemum

Perennials

The list of drought-resistant perennials can be continued. Unpretentious and hardy, they feel great in the sun and grow well between the stones of alpine hills and rockeries:

    • Wormwood (Artemisia)- a perennial herbaceous semi-shrub plant with a tart, bitter aroma of shoots. The leaves are green to silver-gray, dissected. Flowers are in racemose or paniculate inflorescences, the fruit is an achene.
    • Euphorbia (Euphorbia)- a perennial herbaceous or shrubby plant. In addition to seeds, it reproduces by root shoots. All representatives have a milky juice on the cut, which is very poisonous. The flowers are single or collected in rosettes, the inflorescence is surrounded by some kind of glass.
    • Yarrow (Achillea) –perennial plant with baskets with many flowers, it would be more correct to say “milliflora”. Widely used in folk medicine, Stems up to 50 cm high. Yarrow extracts sulfur from the soil and distributes it throughout the area.
    • Lavender– has a wonderful aroma; its purple thickets can beautifully decorate garden paths.
    • Daylily (Hemerocallis)- a plant with tall arrows, at the ends of which there are flowers - has great diversity and is completely unpretentious.


Sagebrush
Spurge
Lavender

Drought-tolerant grasses

Designing a flower garden without herbs and grains cannot be considered complete. From decorative drought-resistant grasses you can plant:

    • Byzantine Chistina (Stachys byzantina)- a bluish-green plant with fluffy leaves.
    • Elimus– another name is grate. An unpretentious herbaceous plant, usually propagated by shoots from the rhizome. The inflorescence forms a panicle, reminiscent of an ear of rye or wheat, and is stored dried on the stem for a long time.
    • Gray fescue (Festuca glauca)- a perennial plant up to half a meter tall. The rhizomes are creeping, the inflorescences form panicles with spikelets, the fruit is a caryopsis. The leaves are lanceolate and can range from green to silver in color.
    • Phalaroides- a perennial grass up to 120 cm high with striped linear leaves. It blooms with spikelets collected in panicles. The leaves do not droop even from severe frosts. Usually, with the help of vegetative shoots from the rhizome, it grows very strongly and can become a difficult weed.


Byzantine chistets
Elimus
Two-source

These herbs will add charm to your flower garden, giving it sophistication and attractiveness.

tall plants

First of all, among tall drought-resistant plants I would like to note decorative bow, mallow. Each of these plants is beautiful in its own way. Double hollyhock flowers captivate your heart with their richness of shades - from burgundy to snow-white. Mallow blooms all summer - from June until almost frost. And these plants grow up to two meters in height.

The decorative onion Allium is not far behind them. Its spherical inflorescences of pink and white shades rise up to one hundred and seventy centimeters.


Yellow is the color of the sun, and for good reason yellow flowers are a symbol of joy and happiness. They bring warmth to every corner of the garden...

Drought-resistant shrubs

It is often very difficult to do without ornamental shrubs when building a landscape. Shrubs are the note that makes the garden truly sound, giving completeness and visual completeness to the landscaping of the territory, on which you have put so much of your strength, your imagination, your desire for beauty.

Cossack juniper (Juniperus sabina) out of competition. It does not require additional care and can withstand unfavorable conditions quite well. Attractive, evergreen, one can say about this shrub that if there are charismatic plants, then this is about it. Juniper with its presence brings special charm and beauty to the landscape.

Euonymus (Euonymus)- a beautiful, very bright, even somewhat picturesque shrub. It is difficult to take your eyes off the euonymus surrounded by properly selected low-growing plants. In the summer months, its openwork, dark green foliage attracts, but autumn comes, and the crown of the bush is engulfed in such a riot of colors that you can’t take your eyes off it. Many of its species are quite drought-resistant. This applies to, and others.

A good example of unpretentiousness and drought resistance is barberry (Berberis). Yellow and bright red leaves adorn the long, thorny branches. Barberry loves the sun and feels great under its rays. Details of caring for this shrub can be found here Euonymus

  • Carefully consider which plants should grow nearby. Under no circumstances should a drought-resistant plant be planted next to a moisture-loving one. It will be very difficult to organize watering.
  • When planting plants, you should establish the correct distance between them. For plants that like to grow too much, root limiters should be used - plant them in containers without a bottom, buried in the ground; the horizontal spread of roots will not be further than expected.
  • Such flower beds should be watered rarely, but abundantly.

All plants need watering, some more often, some less often, but you can’t do without watering. Each plant reacts to the lack of moisture differently - some leaves lose turgor, others stop growing, and others dry out without watering. What to do if the flower garden is located far from the watering site and there is no possibility of watering it on time? In this case, you need to try to choose plants for it that would require less moisture, without losing their decorative properties. This article will discuss which perennial drought-resistant plants to choose for a drought-resistant flower bed.

Perennial drought-resistant plants:

Armeria, periwinkle, gaillardia, carnation, heliopsis, coreopsis, lavender, poppy, mallow, matricaria, young, cypress spurge, aubrietta, sedum, wormwood, sedum (sedum), eryngium, stachys, thyme, yarrow, phlox (creeping species), sage, edelweiss, evening primrose, parsley.

Annual drought-resistant plants:

Amaranth, annual aster, marigold, gypsophila, dimorphotheca, iberis, kermek, convovulus (convolvulus), cosmos, snapdragon (antirium), mesembryanthemum, mirabilis, euphorbia fringe, nasturtium, nigella damascus, purslane, zinnias, eschscholzia, etc. .

Drought-resistant shrubs:

Thunberg barberry, common and Cossack juniper, horizontal cotoneaster, mountain pine, etc.

SPRING

Most bulbous plants, such as crocuses, tulips, and decorative onions, need enough spring moisture to maintain their decorative appearance during flowering. The exceptions are tuberous begonia, candyk, lilies, checkerboard hazel grouse, cyclamen and trillium. But when planning a future flower garden, it is necessary to take into account that in spring small-bulbous flowers, hyacinths, tulips and daffodils, the above-ground part dies off after flowering, and some of them require annual digging, so you will need to additionally think about how to “cover” the empty spaces.

In March-April

At the very beginning of spring, bright yellow flowers appear on the green collar - this is the spring flower rejoicing at the arrival of spring.

After a while, the flowerbed will be decorated with crocuses. Scilla and marigold bloom at approximately the same time, then Pushkinia, Chionodoxa, and Muscari. Dwarf irises bloom, and the very first to bloom is the Denford iris, whose flowers appear before the leaves.

End of April-May

At this time, hyacinths, tulips, and daffodils will decorate the dry flowerbed. At approximately the same time as the late tulips, the oak anemone (anemone), which also tolerates drought well, also blooms. Then the imperial hazel grouse.

Anemone (anemone), photo imperiasada.com.ua

Drought-tolerant perennial plants that bloom in spring include rock alyssum, arabis, deltoid aubrietta, and subulate phlox. These mat plants are often used to edge the edges of flower beds.

Decorative onions - Aflatunsky and Karatavsky - also bloom in May.

At the end of May, peonies, loosestrife, and aquilegia bloom - these plants tolerate drought quite well, but it is better if they are planted not in the scorching sun, but at least in light partial shade.

Loosestrife, photo: sady-rossii.ru

The leaves of irises and daylilies keep the flower bed decorative almost all summer, although in dry summers the tips may burn in an open sunny place. Unpretentiousness, the ability to grow quickly, a wide range of colors, decorativeness during and after flowering - these are the main advantages of these gardeners' favorites. True, floral novelties among these plants can be capricious, so opt for less exclusive varieties. Both irises and daylilies are easily propagated by divisions of rhizomes.

Speaking of irises, by choosing the right varieties, you can admire them until mid-JUNE (with the exception of Siberian irises, which love moist soil); such a garden is called an iridarium.

FIRST HALF OF SUMMER

In the process of evolution, drought-resistant plants acquired specific protective properties that protect them from sunburn and excessive evaporation of logs, and at the same time they are very decorative. Some species have various types of pubescence or a waxy coating that gives their foliage gray, silver, glaucous or bluish hues. Others accumulate moisture in fleshy stems and leaves of various colors - green, dove-blue or purple. Many xerophytic (drought-resistant) species, in addition to decorative ones, have other useful qualities and are used as spicy, medicinal or oilseed crops.

By the beginning of summer, unpretentious drought-resistant perennials grow, which remain decorative throughout the summer - these are stachys, yarrows, sedums, and young plants.

Stachys woolly (cleaner, hare's ears) - grows quickly, easily reproduces (by dividing the bush). Adviсe. The decorative effect is spoiled pink inflorescences- they need to be cut off. With age, the rhizome of Stachys begins to protrude a little, so it is recommended to divide and replant it from time to time so that it does not freeze. Chistets are often used to frame the edges of flower beds.

Stakhis (chistets), photo: fotki.yandex.ru, author milaYa


Yarrows. Like many umbrellas, it reproduces well and can weed, so it is recommended to cut off the faded inflorescences so that the plant does not become a weed (can be used for dry bouquets). Nowadays you can find many decorative varieties on sale.


Sedums (sedums) are often called mat plants. There are many types of sedum, which differ in flowering time and shape, but the most popular are sedum (June?) and sedum prominent (August-September). All types of sedums are decorative throughout the growing season. Easily propagated by seeds, dividing the bush and cuttings.

Juvenile is one of the few plants that simply needs sun and poor soil with good drainage. In the shade the plant loses its attractiveness. Decorative throughout the growing season and requires virtually no care, does not grow weeds, and winters well. A huge number of varieties and species allows you to collect it.

Young, photo flower.onego.ru

DROUGHT-RESISTANT ORNAMENTAL GRASSES

Do not forget that many ornamental grasses are quite drought-resistant, the most popular of them are elymus, two-tasseled grass, and gray fescue.

Elimus - attractive for its leaves with long, pointed leaves of a bluish color. If you do not limit its growth when planting (for example, plant it in an old bucket without a bottom), then it spreads in underground stolons, within a radius of up to 1 m from planting, like wheatgrass, which it resembles. However, you should not refuse it, since it tolerates drought well, while maintaining its decorative properties.


Two-flowered grass - variegated white-green grass has already taken its place in the flowerbeds of many gardeners, who fell in love with it for its unpretentiousness and ability to withstand moisture deprivation. It grows quickly and can behave somewhat aggressively, but since its rhizome is superficial, it is not difficult to remove.


Gray fescue - compact hummocks about 20-25 cm high. Outwardly it looks like sea ​​urchin with bluish-green needles. Gray fescue leaves overwinter and are renewed gradually, without reducing the decorative effect. It does not spread and does not weed. It can grow in one place for 3-4 years, after which it requires rejuvenation by division. Grows best in sunny locations with light, fertile, well-drained soil. Does not like overly wet or overly dry locations.

In June

At this time, coreopsis, rudbeckia, gaillardia, pink pyrethrum bloom, many often call these flowers daisies - these flowers can delight the sun not only with their unpretentiousness and drought resistance, but also with flowers all summer - you just need to remove the faded flowers in time and replace them after a while new ones will appear. All these plants are young plants and it is recommended to replant them every 2-3 years so that they do not freeze. They reproduce well both by seeds and by dividing the bush.

We recommend reading

Top