Yellow flowers (perennials) can delight you with their appearance from spring to autumn. Joyful coloring improves mood, besides, it is easiest to make a flower bed of plain plants.
Yellow garden perennials - how to collect them in one place?
If this idea - how to organize a flower bed of yellow-flowering plants - came to you in the height of summer, then you will have to wait for autumn so that you can replant the elements of the flower garden. It will organically fit into the overall design of your garden, if you know the flowers you like well, have studied the conditions that they prefer, and even seriously like this idea. Bookmarking a flower garden also requires good taste. You can not do without knowledge of agricultural technology. Yellow perennials are very different. Many of them require an acidic soil reaction - it is better to plant them nearby. Between them and flowers that prefer alkaline soil, you can plant those plants that like neutral or slightly acid.
By thinking carefully about the idea of creating a yellow flower bed and spending a little of your time, after a while you will achieve that people will settle in your gardencheerful, like sunbeams, yellow heads. Let's take a look at the species.
Early flowering yellow perennials
As soon as the snow melts, you will have the opportunity to admire primroses, adonis and bulbous (crocuses, hyacinths, daffodils, etc.). Primula is very fond of sunny places, but it can be planted under fruit trees, since its flowering usually ends before the leaves appear on them. Fertile soil and good watering - that's practically all she needs. Adonis or Adonis prefers light soil. It should be watered moderately. And seated by dividing the bush - in September or October. Another unusually beautiful yellow perennials are crocuses. They grow in one place without a transplant for up to four years, after which they need to be seated so as not to be crushed. There are also autumn-blooming crocuses. They are planted in August, unlike the usual ones, which need to be planted in October.
Aquilegia and doronicum are unpretentious yellow perennials
Kozulnik or doronicum blooms in early June. Its flowers resemble daisies, but much brighter. It is growing rapidly. And even when the petals fall off, it remains decorative because of the beautiful dark green foliage. Doronicum also feels good in the shade and blooms even longer. This plant is extremely pest resistant. Aquilegia has flowers of the original form. It can be grown as a biennial and as a perennial plant. Powerful tap root helps it endure droughtwithout sacrificing appearance. Rare and plentiful watering is able to fully compensate for all moisture loss to this plant. Plant it in any place - the aquilegia accepts both the shadow and the abundance of light gratefully. If you still sometimes feed the plant and take care to remove the flowering peduncles, then it will delight you with bright yellow heads until autumn.