Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Foolproof Plants

Even if your thumb is as brown as can be, you can still have a pretty landscape with these easy-to-grow plant picks.

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Photo: RDA GID

Bugleweed

This fast-spreading, evergreen perennial makes an excellent groundcover with its masses of green, bronze or variegated foliage. Spires of blue flowers appear in late spring to early summer. Bugleweed may invade lawns, making it more suitable for areas surrounded by stones or other barriers.


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Photo: RDA GID

California Poppy

Sweeping across the arid foothills and valleys west of the Sierra Nevada, a sea of golden-orange California poppies light up the scenic landscape each spring.

The tall nodding blooms are ideal in rock and cottage gardens, rather than in formal flowerbeds. No matter where you plant them, be ready to remove some of the spent flowers to limit reseeding so the plants don't take over.


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Photo: RDA GID

Cosmos

This beautiful annual will attract birds and butterflies to your garden with its colorful, pinwheel-shaped blooms. Its feathery foliage also is attractive and creates an airy appearance. Cosmos thrives in a variety of conditions, making it a garden must-have.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Daylily

This garden favorite is cherished for its beauty, reliability, and variety. With more than 50,000 named cultivars, gardeners have almost limitless choices. Blossoms last just a day, but many hybrids flower repeatedly all summer long.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Hosta

This hardy garden favorite is prized for adding texture and color to shady areas. Hostas form dense leafy clumps, with blossoms rising up to 3 feet above the foliage.

Thousands of named cultivars offer a wide array of leaf colors, shapes, and textures. While some hostas tolerate sun, those grown in partial shade generally produced the most handsome, longest-lasting foliage.

Hostas are virtually carefree plants. Their heavy foliage helps reduce weed growth and retain soil moisture, but hostas may need extra water during extremely hot weather to prevent scorching.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Impatiens

Reliable impatiens are shade-garden favorites throughout North America, quickly growing to fill in bare areas with undulating mounds of color. These useful landscape plants work equally well in borders, foundation beds and containers.

Once planted, impatiens need very little care. They bloom from spring to first frost, and unlike some other annuals, they require no deadheading to keep the flowers coming.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Morning glory

As its name suggests, the morning glory is most glorious during the early hours after its trumpet-shaped flowers open to greet the new day. But its beauty is fleeting; the blossoms last only one day, withering by mid-afternoon.

These easy-to-grow annuals are probably the most popular flowering vine in North America. They climb just about anything - fences, trellises, arbors, mailboxes, lampposts. This makes it the perfect plant to quickly hide unsightly views.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Nasturtium

This cheerful garden annual thrives on neglect. Once nasturtiums are established, they perform best when left alone, and provide vibrant color from spring through frost.

Since they flourish in poor soil, over-watering or adding fertilizer can actually diminish their beauty. They are so resilient they can withstand severe pruning - some gardeners cut back the large veined leaves for a better view of the sweet-scented blooms.

There are many varieties to choose from, with some growing in compact mounds, and others climbing to 10 feet with the support of a trellis or fence.


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Photo: RDA GID

Pansy

It's hard not to smile when there's a patch of pansies in your backyard. These colorful flowers are best known for the "whiskered faces" that mark many of the blooms. The pattern makes it appear as if the flowers are grinning.

Pansies are part of the large flower family that includes violets and Johnny-jump-ups. They emerged in the early 1800s as the result of crossbreeding four different viola varieties to create the trademark face.

The plants produce a wide variety of brightly colored flowers surrounded by bushy leaves. Most are annuals, although some are biennials or short-lived perennials.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Sunflower

With their bright faces, there's something about sunflowers that make us feel good. And when it comes to kids, there are few plants that draw more "oohs" and "aahs" than these towering blooms!

Sunflower seeds are used for many things, but the most obvious, of course, is bird food! In fact, it's the seed of choice for many backyard songbirds.

The centers are made up of clusters of tiny, tubular, nectar-producing flowers that attract butterflies and hummingbirds.