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2009 monthly plans

November

Plant cold-tolerant annual flowers

Give your garden a jolt of spring color ��� plant annual flowers that laugh at light frost.

Time
1 hour per two dozen plants, plus time to prepare the flower bed
Difficulty
Easy
Frequency
Once a year
Where
USDA hardiness zones 3-8
Overview

Jumpstart your flower garden with annuals that enjoy cool weather:

Annual lobelia

Annual phlox

Calendula (Pot marigold)

Dianthus

Forget-me-nots

Pansies

Snapdragons

Stock

Sweet alyssum

Sweet peas

Violas

 


Steps
  1. Ask the garden center staff if the transplants have been acclimated to the cold, or "hardened off."
    • If so, you can plant right away.
    • If not, put the packs of transplants on an unheated enclosed porch or outdoors in a sheltered area. Move plants indoors if temperatures drop below 32 degrees F. After 7 to 10 days, they're ready.
  2. Check whether the soil is dry enough to work ��� a ball of soil should break easily when you drop it.
  3. Prepare the garden bed:
    • If you already have a garden, rake away any plant litter left from last year.
    • If you're starting a new garden, dig out the lawn or other plants that cover the area. Then use a spade or spading fork to turn the soil to a depth of 8 to 12 inches.
  4. Use a hoe or garden rake to break up large clods of soil and to smooth the surface.
  5. Gently remove the plant from its plastic pot and use your fingers to lightly loosen the roots a little. (If the pot is peat or fiber, just tear off the top edge above the soil.)
  6. Use the trowel to dig a hole about 4 to 6 inches deep and a few times wider than the plant's root ball (the clump of soil with roots growing in it). Set the soil next to the hole.
  7. (Optional) Sprinkle a little dry fertilizer into the hole. Check the label for the recommended amount.
  8. With one hand, hold the plant in the hole so the top of the root ball is even with the top of the hole; use the other hand to fill the hole with the loosened soil.
  9. Press the soil firmly around the plant, to get rid of air pockets that could dry out the roots.
  10. Repeat these steps for each plant, spacing them at the distance recommended on the plant tag.
  11. Use the hose or watering can to gently water the plants ��� apply enough water to soak the soil to the bottom of the roots.
  12. (Optional) Gently pour liquid fertilizer on top of and around the plant.
Green alternatives

Use an organic fertilizer, such as diluted liquid seaweed, to give plants a quick start.

Tips & warnings
  • Working soil that is too wet damages the soil structure.
  • Cool-season annuals often fade in summer's heat; when they do, replace them with heat-loving annuals such as salvia, begonia, impatiens, vinca and petunias.
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  • Materials needed

    • Cold-tolerant annual flowers, as transplants (available at garden centers)
    • (Optional) Fertilizer, either dry or liquid
  • Tools and equipment

    • Spade or spading fork
    • Garden rake or hoe
    • Trowel
    • Watering can or hose attached to a water source

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