Celebrate Spring with Cool-Season Containers
By Othniel Kingsley Chanda
Dandelion Décor & design.
11 April 2015
Brighten up your garden with cold-tolerant plants like ‘Apricot Beauty’ tulips, grape hyacinths, and ‘Delta Lavender-Blue Shades’ pansies. Spring doesn’t suddenly burst into bloom just because the calendar says it’s March . No matter where you garden, planting up containers that herald the new season is fun and easy if you know what plants to use.
When selecting plant material for my early-spring containers, I am more discriminating than I am at other times of the year. Likely candidates include the obvious pansies and spring-flowering bulbs, but annuals, perennials, and even small shrubs and trees can be used effectively as well.
By Othniel Kingsley Chanda
Dandelion Décor & design.
11 April 2015
Brighten up your garden with cold-tolerant plants like ‘Apricot Beauty’ tulips, grape hyacinths, and ‘Delta Lavender-Blue Shades’ pansies. Spring doesn’t suddenly burst into bloom just because the calendar says it’s March . No matter where you garden, planting up containers that herald the new season is fun and easy if you know what plants to use.
When selecting plant material for my early-spring containers, I am more discriminating than I am at other times of the year. Likely candidates include the obvious pansies and spring-flowering bulbs, but annuals, perennials, and even small shrubs and trees can be used effectively as well.
Brighten up your garden with cold-tolerant plants like ‘Apricot Beauty’
tulips, grape hyacinths, and ‘Delta Lavender-Blue Shades’ pansies.
Bulbs In the autumn when I’m planting spring-flowering bulbs in my garden beds, I often plant some in pots, too, with my spring containers in mind. I sink the newly potted bulbs into an open unplanted area in the garden or place them in a cold frame for the winter. Come spring, I pop them out and use them in my container combinations. Sometimes I pack a large low dish with bulbs for an overflowing splash of color. Not all spring-flowering bulbs lend themselves to pot culture though. When it comes to tulips, the single and double, early and midseason Triumph group of tulips works the best. Tall Darwin hybrids and late-flowering types are better off planted in the garden. I’ve had good luck with most types of daffodils, crocuses, hyacinths, grape hyacinths, and dwarf irises. With the exception of the tulips, most of these pot-grown bulbs can be replanted in the garden where they will continue to bloom in subsequent years. I recommend keeping the bulbs in their pots until the foliage dies back naturally, then planting the bulbs at their proper depth in the ground, adding bulb fertilizer or bone meal to each hole.
Recycled containers add flair
Bulbs In the autumn when I’m planting spring-flowering bulbs in my garden beds, I often plant some in pots, too, with my spring containers in mind. I sink the newly potted bulbs into an open unplanted area in the garden or place them in a cold frame for the winter. Come spring, I pop them out and use them in my container combinations. Sometimes I pack a large low dish with bulbs for an overflowing splash of color. Not all spring-flowering bulbs lend themselves to pot culture though. When it comes to tulips, the single and double, early and midseason Triumph group of tulips works the best. Tall Darwin hybrids and late-flowering types are better off planted in the garden. I’ve had good luck with most types of daffodils, crocuses, hyacinths, grape hyacinths, and dwarf irises. With the exception of the tulips, most of these pot-grown bulbs can be replanted in the garden where they will continue to bloom in subsequent years. I recommend keeping the bulbs in their pots until the foliage dies back naturally, then planting the bulbs at their proper depth in the ground, adding bulb fertilizer or bone meal to each hole.
Recycled containers add flair
Annuals and tender perennials
Annuals
and tender perennials that can handle some frost, such as
osteospermums, Marguerite daisies, nemesias, twinspurs, and African
daisies, perform very well in containers in cool weather. These colorful
and long-blooming plants come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and colors
and combine easily with other plants to enhance container combinations.
With proper feeding and deadheading, the tougher plants, like the
Marguerite and African daisies, will continue blooming into fall. When
the hot weather strikes, the osteospermums will stop blooming and put on
vegetative growth, then set new buds for autumn blooms.
Perennials For a stunning display, combine bulbs with annuals, perennials, and shrubs, like the flowering Japanese andromeda ‘Dorothy Wyckoff’ in the above display. When they are potted up, I like to give early-spring-blooming perennials, like violets, primroses, hellebores, barrenworts, bergenias, Siberian bugloss, corydalis, bleeding hearts, creeping phlox, adonis, English daisies, and Virginia bluebells, a prominent location so they can show off their stuff. When these plants have finished blooming, they can be replanted in the garden to be enjoyed for years to come. Sometimes I group a few pots of perennials together in a larger container and camouflage the pots with some woodchip mulch. This setup demands more attention when watering but creates an instant display.
Perennials For a stunning display, combine bulbs with annuals, perennials, and shrubs, like the flowering Japanese andromeda ‘Dorothy Wyckoff’ in the above display. When they are potted up, I like to give early-spring-blooming perennials, like violets, primroses, hellebores, barrenworts, bergenias, Siberian bugloss, corydalis, bleeding hearts, creeping phlox, adonis, English daisies, and Virginia bluebells, a prominent location so they can show off their stuff. When these plants have finished blooming, they can be replanted in the garden to be enjoyed for years to come. Sometimes I group a few pots of perennials together in a larger container and camouflage the pots with some woodchip mulch. This setup demands more attention when watering but creates an instant display.
Plants that can take a chill
The following plants tolerate the cool temperatures of late winter in the author’s USDA Hardiness Zone 7 garden on Long Island. Click on the links below to learn more about each genus or species.
(Common name, botanical name, zones)
Bulbs
Crocuses (Crocus spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Daffodils (Narcissus spp. and cvs.) 3–9
Dwarf iris (Iris reticulata and cvs.) 5–8
Grape hyacinths (Muscari spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Hyacinths (Hyacinthus orientalis cvs.) 5–9
Ranunculus (Ranunculus spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Tulips (Tulipa spp. and cvs.) 4–8
Annuals
African daisies (Arctotis spp. and cvs.)
Marguerite daisies (Argyranthemum spp. and cvs.)
Nemesias (Nemesia spp. and cvs.)
Osteospermums (Osteospermum spp. and cvs.)
Twinspurs (Diascia spp.and cvs.)
Perennials
Adonis (Adonis spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Barrenworts (Epimedium spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Bergenias (Bergenia spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Corydalis (Corydalis spp. and cvs.) 5–8
English daisies (Bellis perennis cvs.) 4–8
Hellebores (Helleborus spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Pansies (Viola x wittrockiana cvs.) 4–8
Primroses (Primula spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Virginia bluebells (Mertensia virginica) 3–7
Shrubs and trees
Azaleas and rhododendrons (Rhododendron spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Camellias (Camellia japonica cvs.) 7–8
Deutzias (Deutzia spp. and cvs.) 5–8
Forsythias (Forsythia spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Japanese andromedas (Pieris japonica cvs.) 6–8
Magnolias (Magnolia spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Winter hazels (Corylopsis spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Winter jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum) 6–9
Witch hazels (Hamamelis spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Get plants used to cold weather slowly • Plant spring containers when nighttime temperatures are consistently above freezing or just dipping down to about 30°F.
• Cold temperatures and excessive sun can damage plants that haven’t been hardened off properly.
• To harden off plants, keep them outside in a protected, partially shaded area for a few days, exposing them gradually to more sun and cooler temperatures.
• Protect plants when a light frost threatens by covering them with an old sheet or blanket.
• Move pots to a sheltered location if a severe frost is expected.
Shrubs and trees Very often when I’m walking through a nursery in early spring I spot a shrub or small tree that is too beautiful to pass up. I buy it on impulse and bring it home without a thought to where I am going to plant it. While waiting for that perfect location to open up, I incorporate it into an early-spring container grouping. This way, I postpone any hasty planting scheme, and I can enjoy my new purchase every time I go in or out of the house. Plants like Japanese andromedas, witch hazels, forsythias, winter hazels, deutzias, camellias, winter jasmines, magnolias, and many early-blooming rhododendrons and azaleas are candidates for spring containers. The newly emerging foliage of Japanese maples and other young deciduous trees and shrubs can be an incredible sight, worthy of being viewed up close.
After a long cold winter, there’s nothing like the soft pastel shades and new growth of early-spring bulbs, pansies, perennials, shrubs, and even trees mixed with the earthy aroma of damp soil and new growth to refresh and invigorate the soul. All of the colors, scents, and textures arranged artfully and with a bit of whimsy will make it an easy transition into spring.
The following plants tolerate the cool temperatures of late winter in the author’s USDA Hardiness Zone 7 garden on Long Island. Click on the links below to learn more about each genus or species.
(Common name, botanical name, zones)
Bulbs
Crocuses (Crocus spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Daffodils (Narcissus spp. and cvs.) 3–9
Dwarf iris (Iris reticulata and cvs.) 5–8
Grape hyacinths (Muscari spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Hyacinths (Hyacinthus orientalis cvs.) 5–9
Ranunculus (Ranunculus spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Tulips (Tulipa spp. and cvs.) 4–8
Annuals
African daisies (Arctotis spp. and cvs.)
Marguerite daisies (Argyranthemum spp. and cvs.)
Nemesias (Nemesia spp. and cvs.)
Osteospermums (Osteospermum spp. and cvs.)
Twinspurs (Diascia spp.and cvs.)
Perennials
Adonis (Adonis spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Barrenworts (Epimedium spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Bergenias (Bergenia spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Corydalis (Corydalis spp. and cvs.) 5–8
English daisies (Bellis perennis cvs.) 4–8
Hellebores (Helleborus spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Pansies (Viola x wittrockiana cvs.) 4–8
Primroses (Primula spp. and cvs.) 3–8
Virginia bluebells (Mertensia virginica) 3–7
Shrubs and trees
Azaleas and rhododendrons (Rhododendron spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Camellias (Camellia japonica cvs.) 7–8
Deutzias (Deutzia spp. and cvs.) 5–8
Forsythias (Forsythia spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Japanese andromedas (Pieris japonica cvs.) 6–8
Magnolias (Magnolia spp. and cvs.) 4–9
Winter hazels (Corylopsis spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Winter jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum) 6–9
Witch hazels (Hamamelis spp. and cvs.) 5–9
Get plants used to cold weather slowly • Plant spring containers when nighttime temperatures are consistently above freezing or just dipping down to about 30°F.
• Cold temperatures and excessive sun can damage plants that haven’t been hardened off properly.
• To harden off plants, keep them outside in a protected, partially shaded area for a few days, exposing them gradually to more sun and cooler temperatures.
• Protect plants when a light frost threatens by covering them with an old sheet or blanket.
• Move pots to a sheltered location if a severe frost is expected.
Shrubs and trees Very often when I’m walking through a nursery in early spring I spot a shrub or small tree that is too beautiful to pass up. I buy it on impulse and bring it home without a thought to where I am going to plant it. While waiting for that perfect location to open up, I incorporate it into an early-spring container grouping. This way, I postpone any hasty planting scheme, and I can enjoy my new purchase every time I go in or out of the house. Plants like Japanese andromedas, witch hazels, forsythias, winter hazels, deutzias, camellias, winter jasmines, magnolias, and many early-blooming rhododendrons and azaleas are candidates for spring containers. The newly emerging foliage of Japanese maples and other young deciduous trees and shrubs can be an incredible sight, worthy of being viewed up close.
After a long cold winter, there’s nothing like the soft pastel shades and new growth of early-spring bulbs, pansies, perennials, shrubs, and even trees mixed with the earthy aroma of damp soil and new growth to refresh and invigorate the soul. All of the colors, scents, and textures arranged artfully and with a bit of whimsy will make it an easy transition into spring.