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5 flowers NOT worth growing! 

Regenerative Gardening with Blossom & Branch Farm
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27 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 406   
@MilliePat
@MilliePat Год назад
I love your channel because many garden channels only address the commercial plants and fertilizers. They rarely address the environmental impact of certain products ❤😊
@Nickelini
@Nickelini Год назад
I understand your reasons for not growing tulips, but the tulips you showed are STUNNING. I always grow tulips because they bring me joy, but I have a tiny garden so I don't have your issues
@fraukeg.facchini2691
@fraukeg.facchini2691 Год назад
Interesting choice of flowers not to plant again. 😂 I am not a flower farmer, just a home gardener who plants some of these flowers to cut and make a few bouquets. While grocery shopping today, I looked at the flowers and what price they were sold for, and I don't know how flower farmers can make money or even break even! Thank you for your concise, down to earth advice!
@Jalleur14325
@Jalleur14325 Месяц назад
I think monetising online mostly - via books and courses..look at Common farm flowers, and Lisa Ziegler - both centre heavily on online learning and teaching other people. If you don't do that you don't really make money. I know three flower farms who folded because they just couldn't make it work financially. One actually managed to struggle on with an on-site cafe but people only go on sunny days and those are limited!
@JulieH-tq3ul
@JulieH-tq3ul Год назад
I had sworn I was never going to grow cosmos again until I saw the pictures of Apricot Lemonade! I'm very grateful that your honest review saved me from disappointment, I'm gonna give cosmos another shot but with a more tried and true variety.
@goblinb
@goblinb Год назад
As you explained it(and I was not aware of this before I saw the video), not growing tulips makes sense for a cut flower business. However I used to grow tulips quite a lot when I lived in Illinois, and I like them a lot for the garden. They almost always perennialized for me, even the fancy varieties, and even some of these were planted along the south wall of my parents house, where cannas and gladiolas had overwintered many years. My drawback about tulips and most spring bulbs, is after they go over, they look horrible, but you have to keep them till they turn yellow and brown, in order for the remaining leaves to give energy to the bulbs so they can return the following year.
@DalhiaSun
@DalhiaSun Год назад
Also the fungus thing is extremely important to me. My poor husband is allergic to almost all antibiotics. Big thank you!
@edanaestenes9656
@edanaestenes9656 Год назад
I am not sure, but do antibiotics work on fungus? I think it would be antifungal medicines. Antibiotics work on bacteria, which is not fungus.
@chrisp.76
@chrisp.76 Год назад
Thanks for explaining about invasive flowers-especially for showing the maps. Really helpful.
@rmcn8173
@rmcn8173 Год назад
Thank you for thinking of those who are immunocompromised. I really appreciate it. I also used to sell antibiotics and resistance in antibiotics and antifungals. I recently took a class in planting a dye garden. The teacher discussed how invasive Queen Anne's Lace can be. Each plant can produce 40,000 seeds. It does make a beautiful color though. Pregnant and hoping to be pregnant women need to take caution around this plant as well. Bedstraw is another good dye plant that needs to be contained.
@TRUTHRULES777
@TRUTHRULES777 Год назад
As a person who’s been gardening since my 20s and I am much older now. I think we all learned what doesn’t work and does work for us and where we plan things and how they do. But when you’re trying to grow specific things like fruits and vegetables, etc. that’s when you have to bring it up a notch. Find out where they should belong in the garden for cold sun and wind purposes. sometimes when you just walk around your yard and you say wow, I wanna plant that little thing and look how good is doing well that’s probably something that if you like the way, it looks and behaves in your garden you should grow again because it’s telling you “I like it here.”
@CMSCK
@CMSCK Год назад
I am with you on tulips. I was unlucky to get fungus in my lungs. It was a hard time fighting that and took a long time with lots of medical follow-up. We want our gardens to bring us joy and not make us sick. I now have to play safe and wear a mask while gardening.
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch Год назад
Very smart of you. I’m sorry to hear of your struggles, I hope you fully recover! ❤️
@Find-Your-Bliss-
@Find-Your-Bliss- Год назад
I also wear a mask outside, more and more.
@poorthing
@poorthing Год назад
I've planted tulips for years. Now I am freaking out...
@GoAwayNow-iz3du
@GoAwayNow-iz3du Год назад
Have a lot of oak trees nearby? I used to get sick doing fall raking with lots of oak leaves, but since I loved away, I haven't had any of that problem with other trees (southern US).
@Jalleur14325
@Jalleur14325 Месяц назад
​@@Find-Your-Bliss-a mask? Because of air pollution?
@LiseFracalossi
@LiseFracalossi Год назад
Interesting commentary on Daucus carota/QAL, and I’m intrigued that you asked Douglas Tallamy himself! You may already know this, but Daucus carota is the same species as the common carrot - just the carrot has been selectively bred for hundreds of years to produce desirable roots. So really we can’t eradicate QAL without eradicating the carrot! QAL can be invasive, for sure, but it’s not high on my list of concerns, compared to things like bittersweet or knotweed. But I agree, if the brown variety makes it less useful to pollinators, then there’s no reason to put more of it into the world. You’re probably one of my favorite gardening channels to watch, and it’s largely due to this holistic (in the original sense) approach you take to gardening.
@mkitchens8163
@mkitchens8163 Год назад
I'm not a cut flower farmer, but I have started growing a group of flowers in my garden for cut flowers for myself and to make gift bouquets for friends and family. I'm going to have to research the perennial scabiosa for my area, zone 7B N MS. We had a banner tulip year this year in our area, as opposed to last year following a fairly dry and very warm winter; most tulips last year bloomed almost at ground level or just 3 or 4 inches high. I can see it not being worth growing for a cut flower. They are definitely annuals for us here but they are such a delight in the late winter/early spring (they've just finished up bloom here). Last year was my first year for Dara, but I absolutely loved it! I actually had one plant come through the winter and it is growing strongly. I'll have to wait and see about the reseeding. The swallowtail caterpillars absolutely ate all my other Dara plants to the ground, as well as the one that survived. I'm not sure if they hosted any swallowtail larvae, but they sure provided a lot of food for the caterpillars!
@cabbking
@cabbking Год назад
I totally hear you with tulips! Long ago I dropped them since in addition to the negatives you mention, squirrels find the bulbs if they persist after one season and eat them. I just can’t afford them.
@apriloestman8304
@apriloestman8304 Год назад
I so appreciate your channel. We grew the Apricot Lemon Cosmos for two seasons and experienced similar results as yours. Thank you for your honesty about Tulips. We have just a small bed growing to add in to spring CSA bouquets (realizing we may not recover cost). Listening to you made me reconsider for next year. They do take extra time to clean!
@janeforever
@janeforever Год назад
I know what you've said about cosmos. I don't cut them but plant them in my garden because of their light & airy structure. It's 1 if the few flowers I always plant among all the perennials & natives that I mostly grow in the garden❤
@aplacetohideaway
@aplacetohideaway Год назад
I've been incorporating flowers into parts of my vegetable garden - cosmos and dill are beautiful when planted together. Both feathery and airy plants. Pretties things up a bit. :)
@imaginempress3408
@imaginempress3408 Год назад
​@@aplacetohideaway that sounds lovely.
@DalhiaSun
@DalhiaSun Год назад
I loved this video ! I’ve never really liked Cosmos. Grew it one year and I was unimpressed. Another plant I will never grow is cleome. It’s very sharp and painful and for me it was hard to get rid of. I didn’t know that about those beautiful tulips. I planted hundreds this fall. I’m zone 6B on the east coast of Massachusetts it’s cold enough here for tulips and I really love them but at 75 with bad knees and back I need plants that will come back. I’m just a home gardener. I’m enthralled with flower farming but at this stage that ship has sailed. I love your honesty . I keep wanting to plant Dara but haven’t gotten around to it. After learning about them I won’t be planting them. Thank you for a great video
@Karen-us3ls
@Karen-us3ls Год назад
This was a great video. I live in zone 9 Scotland and so hardly anything except native plants and ground Elder is ever invasive. 🤣The fungicide issue was enlightening. I’ve taken out about 40 roses from my garden because of black spot. I just don’t want to be spraying plants every few weeks any more. I’ve also stopped buying tulips every year…it was an indulgence I just can’t justify any more. I do grow species tulips, but they are mostly suitable for a rockery as they are tiny! I must put a word in for the Cosmos called ‘Click Cranberry’ it is absolutely beautiful. I am only growing a few white ones this year…same as you. I agree about the Statice. It’s vicious on the hands but makes a beautiful dried display. I’ve only ever grown perennial scabious and even they are too much deadheading work! Thanks again, you helped me see tulip growing in a new light!
@aleashacasarez855
@aleashacasarez855 Год назад
I'm excited to grow cosmos for the first time this year and you definitely didnt deter me! I didnt know they had such a short vase life, so I'm glad to hear the good and bad of it 😊 thank you!
@mylamberfeeties875
@mylamberfeeties875 Год назад
I grow them every year they are beautiful the bees absolutely love them. I make cute summer music videos with them among other flowers. I don't pick my standard flowers I save bouquets I give for sunflowers only.
@bambinaforever5720
@bambinaforever5720 Год назад
I LOVE cosmos. Grow every year.
@johnascialpi5247
@johnascialpi5247 Год назад
theyre good filler flowers cause theyre foliage ,they grow well in cool weather in my experience ofc
@Christine-su1rz
@Christine-su1rz Год назад
The tulip info is so interesting and makes sense! Here in Ny we had a very very mild winter and basically what I planted is flowering with barley any stem at all… and the other info is alarming thank you for the info
@stephaniedesante3433
@stephaniedesante3433 Год назад
Two flowers I am growing for the first time this year are strawflowers and china asters! Seedlings are sprouting now (zone 5a). Would love to see some more information on these flowers in some upcoming videos :)
@hmh3808
@hmh3808 Год назад
LOvE china asters! Till it attracted a little leaf hopper that spread aster yellows throughout my garden! I would recommend if you have the space to grow them in their own place, and away from any precious perennials like peonies, etc. - that would be a huge disappointment if they got contaminated, because the plants have to be completely destroyed, there’s no cure for aster yellows.
@joanmayfield4791
@joanmayfield4791 Год назад
My wild flowers - wood poppies, wild columbine and wild phlox, mixed with Solomon's Seal are doing GREAT! Saves a ton of $ and VERY LITTLE care!
@Find-Your-Bliss-
@Find-Your-Bliss- Год назад
What is your growing zone? I appreciate the list that worked for you!
@joanmayfield4791
@joanmayfield4791 Год назад
@@Find-Your-Bliss- Zone 6. I am also working on establishing ferns into the semi shaded areas. I love the single Japanese painted fern I have - hard to find!! Folks not into ferns anymore.
@Thinkerton997
@Thinkerton997 Год назад
My Solomon seal is just blooming. They look beautiful with lilacs in a bouquet!
@great-garden-watch
@great-garden-watch 2 месяца назад
@@joanmayfield4791do you have any shade ground cover ideas? Flatter…not tall? I love pachysandra but it is a reservoir/carrier of boxwood blight and I have a lot of boxwood.
@Heirloom_Leaves_and_Seeds
@Heirloom_Leaves_and_Seeds Год назад
Great information! As a beginner flower farmer I have always wondered how flower farmers made much money on tulips. From the high cost of bulbs, pulling bulbs for stem length, and blooming so early. Now with the fungicide information I think I will pass on tulips. Totally agree about Cosmos - Apricot Lemonade. I grew it last year & found it to be underwhelming - smaller plants & very, very muted colors. This year I am trying bunny tails, dusty miller, and mahogany splendor one last time before I cut them. A few issues with each. 😊
@trinawilliams1395
@trinawilliams1395 Год назад
Good stuff to know. I have planted seeds of all 5 flowers you mentioned. I also have the perennial scabiosa planted. I think they are all beautiful, but as a new flower farmer I'm finding it difficult already to keep up while working a full time job. I definitely don't need high maintenance flowers. Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts!!
@FilipinoCowgurl
@FilipinoCowgurl Год назад
These are gone out of my cutflower list. Single petal cosmos - The vase life makes the flowers not worth it. Although, I love my doubles! Marigold - Short stems but will still use up my seeds for in the vegetable garden. Calendula - sticky stems but still use them in the garden. Annual Scabiosa - Short vase life and tedious to harvest. Bachelors button - Small, tedious to harvest and short vase life.
@yolandapierce4258
@yolandapierce4258 Год назад
How many days do you get out of your Cosmos and Bachelor Buttons? I usually get 10 days out of both. I'm a hobby grower and I thought that was a pretty good vase life lol
@FilipinoCowgurl
@FilipinoCowgurl Год назад
@@yolandapierce4258 Dang if you can get 10 days, that’s awesome! For my double cosmos I can get 7 days. Singles only a couple days. Bachelor Buttons are a couple days as well. But they are so small, and take much longer to harvest for such a little flower. I had the Boy Black and they were so cute, they will be grown in a flower bed I can enjoy. But there are much easier flowers to grow for money.
@evitaslittleparadise
@evitaslittleparadise Год назад
Very informative vlog! I have a few tulips in the garden that comes back every year and also have the wild variety that I don't mind spreading. I also have the perinneal scabiosa in blue and white that I love, but then I am not a cut flower farmer. I fully understand why you're not growing these 5 flowers again.😊Have a nice day! - Evita
@augustvukosovich4683
@augustvukosovich4683 2 месяца назад
I'm a nurse, and I just wanted to let you know how much I appreciate you linking the information on Aspergillus for us to read. Thank you ❤
@Green.Country.Agroforestry
@Green.Country.Agroforestry Год назад
I had contemplated adding tulips to our lineup when we expand to a larger property .. but I think you have managed to convince me to leave them alone! Most of what we grow are edible flowers, or flowers with edible tubers, or medicinal purposes .. things that people can plant in an HOA that could be used as food in an emergency, but still not raise too many eyebrows. (dahlias, day lilies, cannas, crosnes, hibiscus. yarrows, monardas and such.) _helianthus tuberosa_ might be too much for an HOA .. but we grow it, too 😁
@catherineemerson99
@catherineemerson99 Год назад
Oh, oops! Just ordered two varieties of cosmos after watching your cut flower garden videos and planted one of them earlier this week! But I'll keep an eye on them. I do still plant tulips as I'm putting spring bulbs around our (small) property. I love the pops of color from those, daffodils, and hyacinths, and add a few more every year (so far, but probably about maxed out on space now). People around here are always telling me how tulips don't reliably come back (zone 7 b, SW Oklahoma, mild winters generally), but thankfully, that hasn't been my experience. I don't have the other plants on your list, though I remember statice from my days working at a local florist. And after watching your video, won't be tempted to plant them! As always, thanks for an informative video!
@SasuHinaRox1596
@SasuHinaRox1596 Год назад
So this may sound weird, but Trader Joe’s sells bulb plants as bunches (as bulbs) at really good prices! You can even make an order by calling it in! The pot alone is worth the price, let alone the plants in it! They get shipments in the morning if you want to look at the potted bulb section! I love it ☺️
@maryjoszymanski8409
@maryjoszymanski8409 Год назад
Trying Afternoon White and Apricotta Cosmos this year. If they don’t perform better than the others I’ve tried, cosmos will be off my list too! I’ve started both the perennial Scabiosa and the annual. I’m hoping the perennial will survive for me this year so I don’t have to grow the annuals again. Good to know about the dara! Thanks for the info. It was on my list just to get rid of the seed this year but I think I’ll take a pass. They make a huge mess all over the table as they age in arrangements! Tulips will be off my list for next because of the cost. I’m not a flower farmer so the retail cost of them ($1+ per bulb) has become too cost prohibitive. Thank you for all the information you share! 😊
@emiliebean1221
@emiliebean1221 Год назад
I'm with you on the scabiosa front - converting to perennial scabiosa and starflower only. The upkeep of the annual scabiosa is a headache! Thanks for the great video!
@achnix3167
@achnix3167 Год назад
The perennial ones are pretty easy.... Shorter though i think
@jenn976
@jenn976 Год назад
Thank you very much for this wow. This is very honest which I appreciate. These are the best-researched reasons I’ve heard supporting the decision not to grow these plants. I appreciate that we’re not told not to grow them because, as you said, it all depends on climate (and other factors). There seem to be too many people on RU-vid touting themselves as experts yet they never mention 1) where they’re located & the climate they’re in, 2, whether they are in business or not or 3, anything about soil. I’m not a flower farmer (but I have followed Floret Farm for 15 years and live 2 hours south of her - near Seattle). She decided years ago to grow tulips and has a very different set-up with labor, etc. For my home garden, I decided long ago to grow bulbs other than tulips. Tulips didn’t seem worth it to me and now I have good reasons for not growing them. The only one I’d consider (if I could ever find it) is the Tulipa Sylvestis (yellow, wild in Europe). But not if treated it with fungicide. The only flower I grow on your list is cosmos (the variety you showed). But again, I’m not a flower farmer, only a home gardener. I grow none of the others and I can easily see why you don’t. My garden is primarily for pollinators and my tastes. Pretty funny that one of the marketing reasons used so often (“great for butterflies!”) did not work for the swallowtail because of the variety they developed. But they still use it for marketing that variety of Ammi. Same thing for monarchs. There are many flowers pushed for the monarch butterfly but if you live in one of several states *not in their migration path, why grow them? I try to stick to heirlooms but I don’t have a greenhouse and can’t grow *everything* by seed but I try. (the milk jug-clochettes work wonderfully for seeding hardy annuals in winter) With so many beautiful flowers to grow, these 5 flowers won’t be missed. Thanks very much for your video. Flower farmers are some of my favorite people. Subscribed.
@Dahliaismypassion
@Dahliaismypassion Год назад
I am not a flower grower but I do grow a fair amount of cuttings flowers and I totally agree with you! Did not know about the fungicide issue. I have stopped growing tulips a few years ago as well.
@victorialg1270
@victorialg1270 Год назад
I would like to see a video about your perennial flowers.
@JillBretherton
@JillBretherton Год назад
I watched this with interest as there are a couple of flowers having grown once I thought, ew never again, and 2 of them are on your list. Dara and statice. I found both to be quite ugly. I grow for an english cottage garden anyway so they didn’t fit but I just generally did not see the beauty in them despite them being so popular. Re tulips, as an organic gardener I am concerned by the levels of pesticides from the NL used on them & some of the daffodils. I planted loads the autumn before last and the following summer I hardly saw any bees or butterflies in my garden when I usually have so many. I was very concerned by this. I don’t know if this was just a coincidence but I don’t think I will be buying anymore. I go to a lot of trouble to preserve and encourage wildlife.
@americanpatriot4080
@americanpatriot4080 Год назад
I totally agree, most just don't come back strong. I've been digging mine out each spring. Daffodils and hyacins are more reliable year after year.
@juliasidorov1963
@juliasidorov1963 Год назад
This is so good info! I’m in Colorado too.. agree with you on several of these. Can we get a video of what you are growing more of? Perhaps what you are replacing the ones in this video with?
@michellebeatty7899
@michellebeatty7899 Год назад
Yes please!
@anni50ful
@anni50ful Год назад
In Colorado surely you should look for drought tolerant plants such as geranium, I'm guessing it gets hot there in summer ? 🇬🇧☺
@richbishop7896
@richbishop7896 Год назад
I've been digging out Queen Annes Lace on my property for over 30 years and it still shows up. I'm just a home gardener. No I never planted it. I was surprised my double tulips from last year came back. Didn't know that about the fungus on tulips. I grow cosmos in containers. Bonny zone 5b
@yolandapierce4258
@yolandapierce4258 Год назад
My neighbor used to work at a nursery and she has loads of Tulips. When I told her that I wanted to plant some, she didn't hesitate to tell me not to lol She said that sometimes they come up again and sometimes they don't and we ended up digging them all up over the fall.
@valerieneal2747
@valerieneal2747 Год назад
I LOVE FLOWERS ! THEY ARE BEAUTIFUL AND MAKE ME SMILE WHEN MOST PEOPLE CAN'T🤣 MY FAVORITE OF ALL TIME IS TUBEROSE...THE SCENT IS HEADY, SENSUOUS AND INTRIGUING. I LOVE PEONIES, VIOLETS, PANSIES AND SOME ROSES. BUT MY FAVORITES TO BE HONEST ARE WILDFLOWERS😍 I HAVE LEARNED SO MUCH FROM YOU; I LOVE YOUR FUN LOVING PERSONALITY AND YOU'RE A HOOT TOO. HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY TO YOU🌻🌱🌻
@sarahmunoz14
@sarahmunoz14 Год назад
I think it’s really helpful when you explain why, environmentally and for your business, you won’t be growing something. I live tulips but they don’t do well for me in Southern California. I have heard some flower farmers say bulbs just don’t bring in $ and others are planting thousands of bulbs.🤷🏽‍♀️
@hbogielski
@hbogielski Год назад
I vased cosmos last year and they lasted a long time! When dead ones started to appear I just.clipped them off. I probably had the vase for 10 days!
@michaelarichmond438
@michaelarichmond438 Год назад
I love hearing your reasoning! Personally, you can pry statice out of my cold, dead hands 😂 But gomphrena (so annoyingly floppy AND breaky) and amaranthus (weird octopus tentacles) will never have a place in my garden.
@thecraftyhairdressercardsa205
What a great informative video. I treated myself to a bag of 7 ice cream tulips this year and only 4 came up but only 3 have buds. It’s quite disappointing because they were quite pricey compared to other varieties. The whole fungus thing is a worry, I didn’t realise about that. Thank you for sharing your experience and expertise. New sub here, going to binge your videos now 😬
@alisonlee8153
@alisonlee8153 Год назад
How were the blooms?
@thecraftyhairdressercardsa205
@@alisonlee8153 still not open although they are colouring up more, so fingers crossed 🤞
@hmh3808
@hmh3808 Год назад
Great video! Thanks for detailing your personal experience it is so valuable to other gardeners! From Toronto
@sheilaehrich2774
@sheilaehrich2774 Год назад
This was the first of your videos I ran across. (I will be looking for more!) I really enjoyed this video for a number of reasons, some of them technical, I suppose. First of all, you explained your choices as coming from the perspective of someone growing flowers for a cut flower BUSINESS. Not the everyday gardener or someone trying to grow a sort of Prairie so I don't have to mow my backyard. (Ugh!) I particularly appreciated the segment on Cosmos. I grow Cosmos for the pollinators and I LOVE that they re-seed. My philosophy has always been, buy one package of old-fashioned Cosmos and you'll never have to buy another package. If you don't like where they're growing, dig them up and move them, or throw them in the compost. Easy-peasy. I like the way they fill in empty spaces where something may have died over our sometimes harsh Minnesota winters. (This last one was a doozy!) I appreciated the section on tulips and would like to know what the other variety of Tulip is that naturalizes. I love tulips! My mother-in-law used to have a section of tulips that naturalized into the grove on our farm. And even though no one has lived there for over 30 years, so they receive no TLC, some of them still come up every year. Also, it was good to learn about the fungicide. That's something I will be paying attention to when I look for new bulbs to replant a garden that went awry out front. Again, from your perspective, Statice is really a "pain." While I don't grow it every year, I still have dried Statice from years ago that is still vibrant and I like to use it to fill in dried flower arrangements. I always keep some on hand in my cupboard where I keep my indoor plant fertilizers, vases, pots, etc, Also, nice to know there is a perennial Scabiosa should it be something I might think about growing. All-in-all, a very educational and entertaining video. Thanks!
@equestanton1017
@equestanton1017 Год назад
I lived in the Nertherlands and I must say buying tulips as cut flowers in season was always a joy. Big wonderful bunches of them. I prefer the lovely big simple cup shaped ones on tall stems. Unfortunately I too discovered that the production of tulips is an incredibly dirty business, on our health yes but also on the environment's health. The Netherlands are world champions at contamination of water and soil by pesticides, chemical fertilisers and manure by the tulip industry with very little meaningful regulation. The flower auction has introduced an ecological hallmark that guarantees the flowers carrying it are grown without pesticides but you will be hard pressed to find any at a store near you. Toxic bulbs and yes not just tulips of course. There should be a greater awarness how our garden plants and bought cut flowers are produced because almost none of it is particularily clean. I like the native flower movement where only natives are used which are of the area and so adapted to surviving and producing very well without the use of all these poisons, they're also positively beneficial to wildlife.
@anni50ful
@anni50ful Год назад
Here in the UK the government has just given permission for a pesticide to be used that kills bees?? The stupidity of politicians astounds me😢🇬🇧
@equestanton1017
@equestanton1017 Год назад
@@anni50ful Unbelievable!
@anni50ful
@anni50ful Год назад
@@freespiritwithnature4384 No Im sorry , just look up stupid British politicians ,its bound to be on the internet .
@poorthing
@poorthing Год назад
@@anni50ful the US can top any of your clueless politicians. Deregulation is always for the almighty $, you may not have dollars but greed is the same everywhere. Our legislators are tainted with corporate financial donations.
@653j521
@653j521 Год назад
@@poorthing Oh brag, brag. The US can equal but can't top others for any corruption you can name.
@oldsoul6421
@oldsoul6421 Год назад
Well, the flowers you talk about are huge novelty to me. I live in Poland. But tulips are extremely popular. Our winters are good for them. Thank you for this video.
@patriciakeys4873
@patriciakeys4873 5 месяцев назад
Thank you for helping me make the decision to NOT get any tulips. For all the financial reasons you mentioned but also, new to me, the fungal problems. I have auto immune and now it is permanently off my list. I used to live in HIghlands Ranch but now have moved to Oklahoma so I went from 5b to 7b zone. We get Spring and Fall for about a minute, the rest mostly Summer but Winter can be pretty cold but not cold enough for tulips, those I'd have to get prechilled.
@Mrs.dhplatt
@Mrs.dhplatt Год назад
Rubeckia Goldstrum or the Indian Summer variety it grows readily in our feilds, roadways etc, not to say that I don't harvest it I just harvest in place. Also, same with statice native variety unknown and verbena banariopsis, both grow native and love are wet low areas. Sometimes making it difficult to harvest, but eventually by summer it seeds in grows to higher dryer areas where it is easier accessable.
@olgak506
@olgak506 Год назад
My very first year I planted around 300 tulips and only a couple random daffodils , - yes its pretty but quickly I realized its not the best decision .. it needs to be the other way around ! So I don't think I will plant tulips as much because I want to make more efforts on planting daffodils instead because they do naturalize and multiply and unlike tulips their leaves are not as wide and ugly when they dye back, and since the effort of planting is the same, I think its worth it to spend it on planting stuff thats gonna thrive and not diminish with every year , so lesson learned ! this season I got around 300 daffodils and only 150 tulips, but I never had a chance to plant them , they are chilling in the garage and we still nave snow everywhere, I think I will plant them in containers because it seems I would have to wait forever to have our soil thaw , I live in MN .. my plan for tulips was containers anyway but daffodils I will have to replant into the lawn
@carolp6433
@carolp6433 Год назад
Same here. Mine are in garage, too - snowing now w/3-8" predicted. And probably next week, too.
@auntifelin
@auntifelin Год назад
I totally agree!. My tulips were beautiful on first year then it's not as great looking the next years and now just didnt come back up. My hyacinths also flop when it rains and it always rains in my area in spring so it just ruins the presentation of the flower when its laying on the ground lol.(Right now theyre flopped to the ground again due to the 2 days of rain) Ill just leave them until they just disappear or take them out when they looking bad. They only bloom a couple weeks or even less anyways. Not planting them anymore!
@ElderandOakFarm
@ElderandOakFarm Год назад
Very good to know about the tulips/fungus!
@christinaannabel
@christinaannabel Год назад
Thank you for your thorough explanations. I've come to many of the same conclusions about these flowers, and I'm a fan of larger bloom flowers in general. Although, I giggled that, given how ubiquitous Queen Anne's Lace is in the natural world, you didn't realize that it might be invasive in your garden. Tee hee. Happy gardening!
@OfftoShambala
@OfftoShambala 6 месяцев назад
I love love love statice… I find it super easy on all levels. I’m surprised you find it difficult to harvest. ??? It’s so easy to deal with but it is an easy perennial in my zone. It’s actually a common landscape plant. We get a few cuttable blooms starting in mid Feb, but by mid March thru may… they are like cut and come again… I have only had the purple variety… can’t wait to try the other colors.
@marynadewet4634
@marynadewet4634 Год назад
Watching from South Africa. Cosmos was brought to SA by the British during the AngloBoer War in the horse feed. It is beautiful, but very invasive and therefore considered a weed. The Brits took our diamonds and gave us cosmos!!! But is does cover the fields beautifully in spring and summer in some parts of the country. Tulip bulbs are very expensive here ...always wanted to still do it, now I know better ...also our winters might not be cold enough. Thanks for the info, very interesting to me as gardener and plant lover.
@Kat-mf7mt
@Kat-mf7mt Год назад
I already knew some of these flowers from the epic gardening video ahaha. I will continue to grow cosmos since that is my first successful flower I ever grew from seed as a first time gardener!
@madhavidegapudi08
@madhavidegapudi08 Год назад
Here in india, orange,yellow multipetal cosmos are so common . Sensation mix is something new here. Easy to grow
@Centerpiecegardens
@Centerpiecegardens Год назад
We've learned the hard way a few times. Thank you for putting this information out there. :)
@LavenderandLettuce
@LavenderandLettuce Год назад
So funny I also cut statice and scabiosa from the lineup this year! I'm with you on the tulips, I planted some Darwin's last Fall as an experiment to see if the stems are long enough to cut and leave to perennialize. I used to dislike cosmos but the last few years they have made a comeback for me and I use them for both the foliage and flowers that dance above an arrangement. I find the Afternoon White from Johnny's does well for me as a cut flower with a longer than average vase life (for a cosmos). Grew Apricotta for the first time in 2022 and fell in love....it ages beautifully and has the best vase life I've yet found on a cosmos. I think you mentioned you're going to try it this year....so good luck! Going to try and get seeds for Versaille Flush as they are supposed to be an improved cut flower type...so maybe better vase life too?
@pompe221
@pompe221 Год назад
I've given up on tulips too, because I've lost too many of them to the squirrels and chipmunks. I grow daffodils instead because they're slightly poisonous and don't get eaten. But I had never heard about the fungicide causing resistant Aspergillis!
@melissaschloneger9902
@melissaschloneger9902 Год назад
I really appreciate this video because I have seeds for all of these and have been debating if I should sow them. The tulip bulb discussion definitely opened my eyes to ethical issues since I work in the medical field and get to fight infections. Not to mention how much little and big mammals love to eat the tulips, so I only put them in pots any more. The annual v perennial debate also has significant impact on the environment with use of soil and plastics to produce the annuals that we buy. Of course I could grow my annuals from seed…the only problem with that is the amount of space under lights and in a greenhouse to get them ready to plant out is significant. The main one I like in the spring is pansies.
@meghanmurphy3623
@meghanmurphy3623 Год назад
I pondering this a lot too. Sure annuals grow from seed but clearly perennials don’t involve water water water seed trays and domes and trays. The issue is many perennials that are also good for cut flowers are short lived perennials. I’m always experimenting though. More perennials and shrubs, fewer annuals is def my focus.
@ahavarichardson5426
@ahavarichardson5426 Год назад
I cut my first Statice yesterday, it is perennial in my zone 8b, I'M keeping them!! Orlaya is another I want to perennialize! As well as, Lisianthus!! I ONLY have seven so far! I might ORDER them NEXT year!! Very difficult germination
@OfftoShambala
@OfftoShambala 6 месяцев назад
I realized that same stuff about tulips right away… they are nice to acquire a few bulbs every year for personal annual type enjoyment… and if some come back, great. But, I personally feel there are so many other choices.
@sheamaloney5527
@sheamaloney5527 Год назад
I want to grow flowers for my daughters wedding in September. I would love your advice.🙏 We’re going for lots of color! I love your channel!!!! Thank you for all of your great work! I’m learning a lot!⭐️
@michaelarichmond438
@michaelarichmond438 Год назад
She actually recently just posted a cut flower garden plan video that I think would be helpful! It's funny though because she does reccomend cosmos in it 😂 If you're going for color, you can't go wrong with zinnias.
@jacksonfamily678
@jacksonfamily678 Год назад
Shea Maloney- plant a variety of flowers so if one type has a bad year you have enough others to make bouquets. Also, plant in succession (some each week over 3 weeks) because you want to hedge your bets when they will bloom. Also, remember to plant some things that are for the greenery too. They add a lot of interest.
@dianeosgood6594
@dianeosgood6594 Год назад
Pannicle hydrangeas of different varieties will be blooming in July, August and September. They last after cutting too.
@kelseyclarke9488
@kelseyclarke9488 Год назад
I thought I was the only one why had that issue with statice! I was like I didn’t know this had thorns! I still love it though.
@lsherylc2524
@lsherylc2524 Год назад
Such great info!! I feel like I have joined this very special club that is a bit obsessed w flowers 🌸- just started growing and learning! Thanks all
@summerskyegardens
@summerskyegardens Год назад
Agree with all of these except statice! Oh my that's one flower that's been wildly successful for me as a cool flower in a warmer climate.
@OlgaVCR
@OlgaVCR Год назад
Totally agree with you Bri! And start thinking to stop growing all of them from my small backyard garden.
@olgak506
@olgak506 Год назад
omgosh I spent a lot of money on cosmo seeds this season thinking if I buy it from seed company - I would get better flowers... because I am too very disappointed how small and unimpressive my cosmos were .... hm... I spent 55$ I think and I got probably only 5 or 6 varieties , shipping is very expensive , and I say its a lot for me because I could buy seeds from garden store for a fraction of that, I have a small garden and I grow just a few rows of flowers for looks and for trying to make bouquets and it seems its just not enough for cutting, I don't know how much you really need to grow to be able to make a nice bouquet every week and still have a garden thats not bold... thats my attempt this year :) I also got ami flower! the fake version obv , I have a dream of making a huge bouquet out of it ... and I got bees friend flower seeds )) what im not growing is flowers that need two years to flower , I just can't wait that long , no thanks ( except I got giant aquilegia seeds, ugh so much money and so long to wait .... I dunno why I did it ))) my complaint about seed price is because I only need a couple of plants and I got a big expensive package of seeds for that , so now essentially 45 seeds will be waisted , makes no sense to me , I would rather pay 2$ for 10 seeds and use them all than 10$ for 50 seeds and not use them
@terilooney
@terilooney Год назад
I am in zone 8b, so ver different climate than you, but I am subbing because you are so charming and practical. I am still learning a great deal from you. Best wishes.
@sheilamason1895
@sheilamason1895 Год назад
I Moved into my first home and was so excited to plant about 30 tulip bulbs. When spring came and a beautiful tulip appeared suddenly they began to tip over on their stems. I bent to them pluck so at least I would have house flowers only to find the entire bulb 10:42 had been eaten by moles. My garden center said yeah, only way to get around that was to build a small grid wire cage for each one! That was the last time I planted tulips. Ugh
@chrisdavies6473
@chrisdavies6473 Год назад
Hi, I totally agree with you, I've cut all of those flowers out as well, and I'm growing a lot more perennials.
@peggyjk
@peggyjk Год назад
I have quite a few tulips that came back from last year but I don’t plan on buying anymore……the deer come eat them…we have put small fences around them but not sure if that will deter them, just to much work. Purchased alliums last fall, waiting to see how they come out. I don’t like growing cosmos, they get too big and flop too much….I am trying the black pincushion flower but may not next year if they are that much work, we’ll see. I don’t sell cut flowers but love to garden and give family and friends bouquets. Thanks for sharing!
@catovreys9593
@catovreys9593 6 месяцев назад
So basically all the flowers i am growing this year🤣😂 This is my first year, so i don’t know what to expect. I liked The video. I feel more informed
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch 6 месяцев назад
You might have a totally different experience (in fact I hope you do because they are all beautiful)!
@ivylll3397
@ivylll3397 Год назад
I have a perennial Scabiosa in the backyard. Probably it’s because it’s planted in part shade, I never got any straight stems out of the plant last year😅 The annual version produced nice long straight stems for me, but weren’t near as floriferous as your picture…
@Mrs.dhplatt
@Mrs.dhplatt Год назад
My perennial Scabiosa is planted in part shade also and tends to flop but stems are still straight enough for smaller bouquet work or compotes. I don't fertilize mine, and it still leans, possibly it's growth habit. Tends to stand up better in clay heavy gravel soils, similar to dirt road material. Also native grown.
@evavargova42
@evavargova42 Год назад
Thank you so much for all this information I'm a novice gardener when it comes to fruits vegetables but flowers as well and this is definitely information to consider. Thank you for educating us.
@mariefriedmann3203
@mariefriedmann3203 Год назад
Wonderful content, btw I understand about the tulips… I just have a few early orange emperors … single large… that’s it. They’re mixed with the iris and so I have something to look at in April and May!
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch Год назад
Yes some do perennialize!! The low maintenance ones are great 😂
@shirleysenkler781
@shirleysenkler781 Год назад
I planted tulips about 30 years ago and after 20 years trying to get rid of them, they are still coming up and looking gorgeous. I'm in zone 4.
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch Год назад
That’s great! Likely a combination of variety and your conditions.
@dmg1866
@dmg1866 Год назад
What chance have I in regrowing my amazing Gudoshnik tulips for next year. They're going over now and I'm letting the leaves feed the bulbs before I tidy them up....Maybe I've made an expensive mistake? 😮
@charlesdelarock7960
@charlesdelarock7960 Год назад
Thank you for the videos and like you I grow Dahlias and cross pollinated to get new colors My plant to absolutely avoid is Drumstick Allium,…very invasive and hard to get rid of. I am sorry I planted 60 of them 5 years ago now I have hundreds to kill. I usually wait for a raining day to be able to pull it all stem and bulb out and discard it. Do not put it on your compost pile
@Cherryparfait41
@Cherryparfait41 Год назад
Cosmos have always been a little wild for me and are space hogs. I, too, was completely underwhelmed with apricot lemonade and decided last summer-no more cosmos. I even pitched the seed and I rarely do that. 😂 Wimpy in the vase.
@rdm98607
@rdm98607 17 дней назад
I totally agree. They are beautiful but not cost effective. Especially with underground varmits.
@LiilLouii
@LiilLouii Год назад
For me, the one flower I won’t try to grow again are ranunculus. I tried two years in a row and had no luck. I’m not sure why but they would grow leaves but never bloom.
@gracefulgrowing144
@gracefulgrowing144 Год назад
Me too! I had to buy some already planted. Mine will not grow. I have tried for 2 years now so I'm done with those
@benettemcneill984
@benettemcneill984 Год назад
This is my first year growing ranunculus, 250 of them. I planting them in two week intervals. The first bunch looks good (leaves only so far). I hope I have better success than you. Your comment is going to make me do more research on them so I can have the best chance for blooms.
@candicesummers5427
@candicesummers5427 Год назад
Did you soak the corms and leave them in soil in a dark area for two weeks before planting outside? I did this with wonderful results. This is my second year of blooms.
@benettemcneill984
@benettemcneill984 Год назад
Candice Summer I soaked, put in soil in dark place took about 3 weeks to see any roots. I did that around March 15 it is now May 25. No flowers so far. No more real growth of leaves since I put them in ground about 3 weeks ago. The leaves still look good though. I am optimistic. I think I will see some blooms soon.
@benettemcneill984
@benettemcneill984 Год назад
@@candicesummers5427 yes. By the time they got some roots it was about 3 weeks. Today, 5/30/23, still no blooms. I gave them some fertilizer and a good watering today. Some of the leaves had some yellow on them but for the most part they all look good.
@theweirdospfan.28
@theweirdospfan.28 8 месяцев назад
I planted a line of darwin hybrid tulips and daffodils, can't wait for the spring
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch 8 месяцев назад
Darwin’s are great for perennializing, hope they do well for you!!
@kathrynmettelka7216
@kathrynmettelka7216 Год назад
Instead of tulips, I grow daffodils. Not a flower farmer, just a retiree who likes blooms for curb appeal and flower arranging. I like that daffodils can naturalize, giving good value. Sometime I may grow some species tulips but it will not look like what i saw in Amsterdam one spring.
@deniseward002
@deniseward002 Год назад
I loved hearing about the flowers you're not growing. I love them anyway but I can definitely understand why you prefer to give them a miss.
@debbiethomas3687
@debbiethomas3687 Год назад
I love Cosmos, but then I'm only growing for my garden and for the bees. Tulips I love but consider most of them a waste of money. They look great the first season after planting but with the exception of a few species that most just go downhill after that. I didn't know about the fungicides either, and since I try to be organic in the garden I don't want to be dependent on fungicides for anything. I've never grown statice, and I don't think I will now - thanks for the tip. I'm accident prone at best and am forever cutting myself anyway, so don't need to add to the perils of my gardening year!
@xxSydneyFox
@xxSydneyFox Год назад
You broke my heart when you said tulips first 😂 those are my favourites ❤
@Blossomandbranch
@Blossomandbranch Год назад
I know I’m sorry 😅
@TaraFerrari-x9d
@TaraFerrari-x9d Год назад
Love this! Now do a top five 😏🙃
@annakozlowski4837
@annakozlowski4837 Год назад
Your vlog popped up and I am hooked will go over past ones ..looking forward to more❤🌹
@bluejay3945
@bluejay3945 Год назад
As a retired horticulture person it always bothered me about the lack of honesty in the field in regard to plant quality. People rushed to patent stuff without truly looking at the entirety of the plant. This has led to invasives, short lived weak plants, or poor performance. There are certain places where actual trials are conducted such as the recent hydrangea trials at Mt. Cuba in Delaware but overall a plant’s attribute are left up to the individual promoting that plant and far too many people turned out to be used car salesmen. Your insight is valuable but sadly not the norm and the one guarantee with gardening is that everyone has at least 5 plants they should never have planted. You need to research the horticultural system in the Netherlands. IMO they are the most environmental and chemical free system in the world. Their standards are world class as is their food production requirements
@casondraflowerday5296
@casondraflowerday5296 Год назад
Same experience with the Apricot Lemonade cosmos…very disappointing. But I loved the Fizzy Rose Picotee cosmos I grew last year. Love your channel so much! Thank you so much for all the knowledge you take the time to share ❤
@lustraveller717
@lustraveller717 Год назад
I agree with you about tulips. They just aren't worth it and I'm tired of all the disappointment of them not blooming.
@sbffsbrarbrr
@sbffsbrarbrr Год назад
Not only that, when there are actual buds, something bites of the tops of many of my tulips. I could almost deal with that if the unopened buds were eaten. But no!...they are just laying next to the tulips. Daffodils only from now on 😊. So far, nothing seems to bother them.
@cherylrosbak4092
@cherylrosbak4092 Год назад
@@sbffsbrarbrr I stopped growing tulips because the squirrels eat the centre out of the bloom and discard the petals!
@DalhiaSun
@DalhiaSun Год назад
When I first moved to this house I planted lots of purple tulips and the turkeys ate every bloom. So I started planting white daffodils with them and now I have no Turkey problems. I now have thousands of white daffodils of various varieties and I love them because they are the guardians of my spring gardens.
@lisar9847
@lisar9847 Год назад
@@sbffsbrarbrr squirrels
@brockreynolds870
@brockreynolds870 Год назад
I use cosmos on my landscape jobs all the time, and my customers love it... I don't grow your'e species, however.. I grow cosmos sulphureum, "Bright lights", the butterflies just adore these things.
@RowenMyBoat
@RowenMyBoat Год назад
I’ve refused to plant tulips now for over 45 years. It was my very first garden and I took all this time to plant all these tulip bulbs in my front center flowerbed. Come spring, they start popping up as I greatly anticipated their blooming. Well they did! They were absolutely stunning! This was about 2 pm in the afternoon. Around 6 pm, a small storm front moved through with strong winds. GUESS WHAT??? Bye bye bloomed tulips. EVERY last one of them! Never again!
@abeal49
@abeal49 Год назад
interesting about the aspergillus. It does cause terrible pneumonia
@emelv44
@emelv44 Год назад
Thanks for the intel on the Dara; I literally have a pack sitting on my counter.
@RT3Creations-Learn
@RT3Creations-Learn 4 месяца назад
Awesome video! I can take a lot of useful information from this video. Thanks again!
@emkayprincess425
@emkayprincess425 Год назад
I'm doing tulip at least once next year to try them out in my new climate, but they are lame that they are basically an annual. Cosmos are a nope for me too, were hard to direct sow, I'll stick with some daisys instead. :)
@JulieTeague-jq9ie
@JulieTeague-jq9ie Год назад
The pink lemonade cosmos were a huge disappointment to me as well, just as a home gardener!
@onetwocue
@onetwocue 6 месяцев назад
The only scabiosa I use is scabiosa fama blue. The flowers are like 3 to 4 inches across. Hopefully you can get your hands on it.
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