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Easy-to-grow Alliums
provide one of the most effective ways to ensure
continuing color and beauty in your garden after
spring-flowering bulbs have faded. While you wait
for the cheery blooms of summer flowers, it¹s
easy to enjoy the outstanding features of Alliums:
- Exceptionally easy to grow with little concern
for soil conditions. - Intriguing, unique character
of blooms that are a delight to behold. - Great
ornamental value after flowering because the flower
heads continue to provide an interesting display
even after the colors have faded. Great in dried
arrangements. - Ability to naturalize exceptionally
well by multiplying year after year for increased
beauty. - Distasteful flavor for animals, so they
won¹t eat any part of them. - Attractive
to hummingbirds!
Alliums
come in all shapes and sizes and are lots of fun
to grow. They fit into almost any garden setting
and provide a much-needed bridge of color between
spring and summer flowers. Sometimes called ornamental
onions, Alliums do best in full sun with
well drained, fertile soil and good moisture.
Plant them in September or October about 8-10
deep. Allium really look best in the company of
other summer bloomers. Sweet alyssum, rock cress,
bachelor's buttons, coreopsis, sweet William,
foxglove, baby's breath, daylily, iris, red hot
poker, coralberry, barberry, Japanese Maple, Deutzia
rosea, weigela, and Geranium pretense are just
some of the companion plants that look fantastic
with Alliums.
Alliums
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