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Skaggs: Plan your plants to bloom all season
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The normal way of buying flowering plants tends to produce landscapes with three stages every spring: a flash of bountiful flowers, a fizzle and wait-till-next-year.

It seems to happen almost every year — spring fever leads gardeners to buy like mad, looking for anything and everything in bloom.

Trying to buy out the garden center on a single visit isn’t all bad. It’s certainly welcomed by the nursery and garden center owners. And, spring is the best time of the year to buy spring-blooming plants. You can see the plants in bloom and tell if they’re the colors you have in mind.

Spring buying sprees have drawbacks, though. The first is how quickly the color fades after you get home. Many people do not realize that when you buy that plant and take it home in its peak of color, within a week or so those blooms will be gone until next year.

Installing blooming plants can shock them and further shorten their display. You can stretch the blooms out a few more days if you just put them where you want them, still in their containers, and keep them watered until the blooms drop. Then plant them.

One of the biggest drawbacks to one-day spree-buying is that when you buy many kinds of plants in their peak of bloom, you can expect them to all bloom together next year and for years to come. The result is a real splash of color that lasts a week or two, but a somewhat drab landscape for the rest of the spring.

Perhaps a better idea is to simply spread out your landscape purchases. Why not visit the garden center once a month during the spring to buy plants that bloom at different times?

Azaleas are a prime example. Azaleas are available in three types in terms of their time of bloom: early, midseason and late. Early-blooming varieties usually bloom in early- to mid-April in North Georgia.

Spring-flowering bulbs such as tulips and daffodils act much the same way. They come in early, midseason and late-season varieties. Buying the right varieties can extend their color several weeks.

And for season-long interest, look for plants that bloom for extended periods. A few to consider are knockout rose, "rose creek" abelia, dianthus, "Miss Huff" lantana, "summer snowflake" viburnum, hellebores, asters, hollyhocks, daylily, phlox and Shasta daisy.

For a great selection of blooming plants, mark your calendar for the Spring Garden Expo at the Chicopee Woods Agricultural Center on April 9-10. For more information, visit the Hall County Master Gardeners’ Web site at www.hcmgs.com.

Billy Skaggs is an agricultural agent and Hall County extension coordinator. Phone: 770-531-6988. Fax: 770-531-3994.