Spring tulips

4 It does not matter what color scheme you choose, tulips will provide it – soft pinks, gentle blues, hot reds, and near blacks. They generally flowers in mid – and late spring, and are best dug up after the foliage has faded. Store them in a dry, warm place for planting out in early winter. If planted too early they can shoot prematurely, and get zapped by frost. The sturdier T. greigii and T. kaufmanniana hybrids can be left outside all year.

THE INFORMAL LOOK

LEFT: A soft-colored, midsummer mix of dark-eyed petunias, yellow-faced pansies, cineraria, and Argyranthemum “Mary Wootton”

HIGH FORMALITY

RIGHT: Urns on plinths make the ultimate focal point. This fulsome planting involves a spread of Helichrysum petiolare, trailing blue lobelia, petunias, and pelargoniums.

CLIMBERS

BELOW: Where there is limited space in the garden for climbers, try propelling them out of pots. Old-fashioned sweet peas have a sensational scent and you can grow them up a wigwam of canes.


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