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Cutting garden
I'm planning to have a cut flower bed or two in my new veggie patch. Never grown flowers for cutting before so any tips on best varieties for growing and cutting and vase life are welcome.
Also, apart from perennial cut flowers, do I need to include annuals in the general crop rotation scheme?
Vendée - 20kms from Atlantic coast.
"The price good men (and women) pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men (and women)."
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I'm growing cut flowers for first time obelixx, I've found Sara Ravens website brilliant both for choice of seeds or plant plugs to buy and the information on how to grow them. It's a very inspiring website. The Higgledy Garden website is also packed full of info all told in a very tongue in cheek way. Seedaholic is also another good site for info and varieties. For xmas I was bought "The Cut Flower Patch" by Louise Curley which is excellent. It's full of practicle advice as to planning and siting your patch, suggesting best plants to grow, including planting plans. Also how to condition your plants after cutting to give them a longer vase life. Hope that helps.
Therse are the plants I will be sowing.
Foliage: ammi majus and ammi visnaga, and euphorbia oblongata
Flowers : cosmos various colours, larkspur, scabiosa,antirrhinum, agastache, zinnia, helianthus, various rudbeckias, dahlia bishops children, karma dahlia plants which are bred specially for the cut flower, nigella, calendula, and a few others if I can find the space! Great plants to attract bees too.
Thanks Star. One of my aims for the cutting garden is to encourage pollinators.
I have a cutting bed in my veg garden but I grow mostly annuals in it. I have 3 Gypsophila perennials though and several of the flowers mentioned above. There is also a trellis for Sweet Peas.
Thanks. Some lovely suggestions.
I have never done any flower arranging of any sort so will be starting simply with bunches of flowers. Better do some research on that too I suppose. A friend in Belgium had beautifully arranged posies and bunches all over her house and even used cut flower heads to decorate the sculptures in the garden.
That's exactly the look I'm aiming for Busy. Fresh and natural. Love your colour combinations.
Thank you
They filled the kitchen with scent aym. They need a lot of watering here.
I find Alchemilla Mollis invaluable when popping pink roses in a jug - it's the perfect filler for them
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Busy, in the top picture what are those yellow flowers that have the same form as cow parsley? They really are lovely.