Petunias have long captured gardeners’ hearts with their stunning colors and bold blooms. Get the most out of these beloved annuals by learning how to deadhead petunias to promote new growth and ...
Brenna Estrada, farmer florist at Three Brothers Blooms and author of Pansies: How to Grow, Reimagine, and Create Beauty with Pansies and Violas Angela Judd, certified master gardener, author of How ...
Regular deadheading ensures petunias will bloom all summer long. Most petunias will need to be deadheaded at least once a week. Adequate light, water, and fertilizer will also support prolific blooms.
Everything is coming up roses this time of year. Clematis are showing off as are all early flowering perennials, annuals and ornamental grasses. The garden is in bloom and this is the time to ...
Petunias' enduring popularity is no surprise: They're easy to grow and come in every color of the rainbow (often accompanied by a heavenly fragrance) and in your choice of blossoms plain or ruffled, ...
13:29, Thu, Jul 31, 2025 Updated: 13:32, Thu, Jul 31, 2025 Petunias are an excellent flower to add to your garden. They come in so many different vibrant colours, and they can flower from spring all ...
Flowering annuals will show you a good time with the brightest colors in the plant world. Grow them in sun, shade, underneath shrubs or trees, in borders or in containers of any kind. Annuals don't ...
Q: Our petunias have been blooming for several weeks, thanks to our AeroGarden. — Nancy Edmonds Hanson, Moorhead. A: When I saw Nancy’s recent day-brightening post on Facebook, showing an indoor ...
Bursting with color and relatively low-maintenance, petunias are a longtime favorite of gardeners. But that wasn’t always the case. Many older cultivars did not tolerate heat well, said University of ...
I have mentioned Mexican petunia for various reasons a number of times throughout the years. Not a petunia or even in the same family as petunias, Ruellia is a native of Mexico. It is a genus of about ...
Beautiful and fragrant blue petunias get their unusual color from a molecular defect in the system that controls the acidity of the plants' cells. A new study reveals this defect in full, solving the ...