Design a Garden for Flowers All Summer Long

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Snapdragons showcase summer’s ebullience.

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Photo by Maryeoriginals via Wikimedia Commons

Planning a Long-lasting, Colorful Garden

Written By: Catherine Boeckmann Executive Digital Editor and Master Gardener
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When planning on how to design a garden, think about how to keep the flowers blooming all summer long. Here’s a plant list and gardening advice from The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

The ideal summer flower garden develops in waves, reaches crescendos of bloom, and depends on chronological succession.

What combinations of plants will keep your garden colorful all summer long? Here are some suggestions.

Early Summer

Bleeding hearts
Delphinium
Early roses (Rosa hugonis; damask, eglantine, and gallica roses)
Iris magnifica
Oriental poppy
Peony

Midsummer

Astilbes
Bee balm
Daylilies (try ‘Stella de Oro’)
Early-blooming white phlox
Hollyhock
Hollyhock mallow
Regal lily and Asian hybrids such as ‘Enchantment’
Snakeroot

Late Summer

Asters
Fall-blooming anemones
Globe thistle
Harrington’s pink aster
Japanese iris
Late lilies and daylilies
Monkshood
Pink and white phlox
Tiger lily
White boltonia

  • Choose flowers for their color, beauty, and fragrance, of course—but also consider the season in which they bloom.
     
  • Avoid planting midsummer bloomers all in one spot; instead, distribute groups of them throughout the garden. This will draw the visitor’s eyes through the whole area, creating the effect of a greater expanse of color.
     
About The Author
Catherine Boeckmann

Catherine Boeckmann

Executive Digital Editor and Master Gardener

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...