Channel Button

There are 2 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #1 by Helium's members.

Home & Garden   >

Annuals

Get a Widget for this title

Best annuals for rock gardens

Rock gardens can be miniature beauties or an entire yard full of blooming and changing plants. Annuals are natures delight in the sense that they bloom their hearts out. There best feature is after blooming they produce tons of seeds and next year, the same annuals may return to your yard. One of the reasons to use an annual in your rock garden is to provide that lush growth of flowers to augment the starkness of rock and sand, the two primary components of a rock garden. In the Northwest, our rock gardens tend to be the places with the worst soil and lots of rocks. Which annuals should you use to decorate these tough to grow in spots in your yard?

Sunflowers Galore

If you drive through the midwest, you'll see clusters of sunflowers, often grown from hybrid plants used as a crop. If you've never grown sunflowers, you will find them easy to grow, so easy children love to grow them. There's a number of varieties that range in color and size and you can get the native species that has many branches and lots of flowers.

Calendula

This plant is half-Sunflower and half-Marigold in my mind. It has large, tough seeds that are the easiest to grow that I've encountered. These seeds have grown in my cedar chips. They bloom and bloom. It's tough and hardy and a real delight. The come in gold, creamy yellow, slightly reddish, somewhat orange, all from the same set of seeds.

Candy Tuft, Alyssum and Gold-Dust Alyssum

Many people confuse candy tuft and alyssum because they are very similar in that they produce tons of white and sometimes purple shaded flowers and bloom almost continually. Many times they both act like perennials since they are really tough. These don't grow very tall and spread. Gold dust alyssum is similar to alyssum but it often hangs by one root from a rocky crag and produces a much taller and wider plant with brilliantly yellow flowers. The gold dust alyssum doesn't bloom as long but it is a real standout. Candy tuft tends to have flatter bunches of flowers whereas alyssum produces tufts. All work well in a rock garden.

California Poppies

Not all poppies have the same growth pattern, many oriental poppies are perennials rather than annuals. California poppies grow easily from seed and have a wildflower growth pattern well suited to rock gardens. California poppies have hardy greens and cup shaped orange flowers that keep blooming.

Ice Plant

This desert native looks quite a bit like a cactus when you look at the creeping stems in that it is rather fleshy. The flowers


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Best annuals for rock gardens

Add your voice

Know something about Best annuals for rock gardens?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Should you use pesticides to control garden weeds?

Click for your side.

138645

Featured Partner

OneWorld

OneWorld United States publishes US and international perspectives on global issues gathered from OneWorld partners w...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA