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If you are looking for the perfect flower to enliven your winter landscape, then pansies and violas ought to be your choice.
That said, pansies (Viola x wittrockiana) don’t reliably keep coming back year after year unless they self-seed. And because most purchased pansies are hybrids, the plants that result from self ...
Planting perennials is one of the smartest low-maintenance garden moves you can make. So what are perennial plants, you may ...
Perennial Violas are more heat tolerant than most pansies. Shear them back when the foliage and flowers look tired, then let them self-seed in the fall if you want more plants.
Violas can be mixed into a perennial border or they can be planted over spring tulips or daffodils. These spring cuties are a perfect plant to start the growing season or brighten a container ...
Few gardeners start perennial flowers from seed (the ones that will come back year after year in the ground). Here's how to do it.
Pansies (and violas) are a great addition to the winter garden. They are cheerful, come in a kaleidoscope of colors, and bloom through the winter months when little else is flowering. Pansies are ...
Email Print This Page Share on WhatsApp Steve McQueen‘s contemporary Chicago thriller “Widows” (November 16, Fox), starring Viola Davis, will open the 62nd BFI London Film Festival.
All violas are cool weather plants; the perennial species are a harbinger of spring. The annuals will do best in the spring and the fall. Although botanically pansies and violas are in the same ...
Cut back perennials, sow winter salads Tasks to carry out this weekend in your garden and veg plot to ensure a healthy growth of perennials and plenty of winter salad.
Perennial violas (e.g. V. cornuta) that have been flowering for weeks and are getting leggy can be cut right back and given a liquid feed.