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This Mixed Cut Flower Garden Plan shows you how to grow a gorgeous flower garden that also provides long-lasting blooms for cutting. By combining perennials, annuals, and a versatile shrub, you can tuck colorful flowers into a backyard or existing garden and enjoy fresh stems for vases, bouquets, and cheerful arrangements all season.
Part of Our Garden Plan Collection
This plan is part of our free Garden Plan Library, featuring tested layouts for vegetables, flowers, and mixed gardens. Each plan guides you on what to plant, when, and how—so you can grow with confidence and enjoy a steady supply of blooms for cutting or decorative purposes. →Browse the full Garden Plan Library.
What This Plan Delivers
A dedicated layout for a flower garden design that includes perennials and annuals which are good for cutting and bouquets.
Step-by-step instructions for soil prep, planting, watering, and maintenance
Plant list along with a schedule and spacing guidance for consistent blooms
Tips for succession sowing to keep flowers blooming all season
Flexible — shown as a dedicated bed, but works in rows or borders
Fun Fact
Almost all flowers in this plan can be grown easily from seed!
Mixed Cut Flower Plot Plan
This cutting garden is drawn as a single flower bed—fun to visualize in the Garden Planner—but you can grow these same flowers in rows, along borders, or tucked into mixed beds. The goal is simply to have reliable blooms (and foliage!) you can harvest again and again. This plan beautifully blends:
Perennials such as roses and yarrow, which return every year
Annuals such as zinnias, sunflowers, scabiosa, cosmos, and dill — all easy from seed and incredibly productive
Tender perennials like dahlias are breathtaking. Lift the tubers in colder regions and replant in spring.
Bulbs such as pest-resistant alliums, which give early structure and can be replanted for another season
Foliage, because great bouquets need greenery! Shrubs such as photinia or pittosporum provide filler all season, from spring arrangements to holiday greenery.
An easy cutting garden!
The Plant List
A single shrub—photinia (Red Robin)—anchors the plan. Its evergreen leaves provide beautiful filler for arrangements year-round. Variegated pittosporum is another excellent choice, but truly any shrub with attractive foliage will work.
Annuals give the biggest bang for your buck—plant generously for abundant summer color.
Dill may surprise beginners, but its airy foliage and yellow umbels bring movement and depth to summer bouquets. Depending on your variety choices, your cutting garden can be pastel, bold and bright, or a cheerful mix of both.
New to cutting flowers? Also consider multi-stemmed dwarf sunflowers in pale shades—‘Valentine’ is a lovely beginner-friendly choice with soft, lemon-colored petals.
Add 1 to 2 inches of compost around perennials at season’s end to keep them vigorous.
Step 4: Harvesting
Cut flowers in the early morning, using clean pruning snips.
Put stems immediately into water. Keep a bucket handy in the garden for easy harvesting.
Gardener Spotlight: Susie’s Experience
“I always dreamed of having a cutting garden, but I never knew where to start. The Garden Planner made it so simple to see how many plants I needed and how to lay them out.
I created a little dedicated flower area (mostly because it was fun to draw in the Planner!)—but the truth is, these flowers grow beautifully in rows or right inside a regular flower bed.
My favorites were the zinnias, dahlias, and scabiosa. And oddly enough, the dill! Its feathery leaves added such a pretty texture to my bouquets. The photinia shrub was the real secret—having easy greenery to snip made every bouquet look professional.
By late summer, I was cutting flowers every few days and giving bouquets to neighbors. I must have a green thumb after all! If I can grow a cutting garden, anyone can.”
See Susie’s cut flower photos below!
FAQs for the Cutting Garden Plan
Q: Do I need a dedicated cutting garden area?
A: Not at all! This plan is shown as a standalone bed for clarity, but the flowers grow just as well in rows or mixed borders.
Q: Can everything be started outdoors?
A: Yes—most annuals are easy to direct-sow. Perennials, shrubs, and dahlias are planted as nursery plants or tubers.
Q: How do I keep flowers blooming all season?
A: Cut often. Harvesting encourages more growth—especially with zinnias, cosmos, and scabiosa.
Q: How should I overwinter dahlias?
A: In Zones 5b–10, mulch deeply after frost. In colder zones, lift tubers and store them in a cool, dry place.
“I must have flowers, always and always.” — Claude Monet
A cutting garden rewards you for every snip—more blooms, more color, more joy. Whether pastel, bold, or wildly mixed, it’s a garden designed to be shared.
Catherine Boeckmann is the Executive Digital Editor of Almanac.com, the website companion of The Old Farmer's Almanac. She covers gardening, plants, pest control, soil composition, seasonal and moon c...
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