Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Old Fashioned Favorites

These blooming beauties have stood the test of time. Often when people mention their favorite flower, one of these classics is named.

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Photo: RDA GID

Bleeding heart

Delicate-looking foliage and heart-shaped flowers make this bloom a captivating spring favorite. Long-lasting blossoms open in late spring, covering the plants with charming pendant flowers in shades of rose pink and creamy white.

The plants are dormant by midsummer, so they're best planted at the back of a border, where later-blooming flowers can camouflage the dying foliage. Waiting to cut the plant back enables it to self-seed, ensuring an even more heartwarming display the following spring.


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Photo: RDA GID

English primrose

This fragrant flower attracts bees, butterflies and birds. In spring, tight clusters of colorful blooms appear on the stems with dark green foliage.


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Photo: RDA GID

Forget-me-not

This flower makes sure you will remember it year after year. It readily reseeds itself and spreads in your flowerbeds-even to the point of being invasive. Combine it with spring bulbs for a show of color after the bulb's blooms fade.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Foxglove

In ancient times, these tall, graceful flowers were believed to be favored by fairies. Today, they're prized for adding storybook charm to the garden.

Foxgloves are biennials or short-live perennials. They generally don't flower until one season after they're planted, but they self-sow readily. If spent flower heads are left in place, the seeds will distribute themselves, producing a new crop of "volunteers" each spring.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Hollyhock

Up, up, and away! The stately blooms of hollyhock will take just about any garden to new heights. These old-time favorites unfurl richly colored flowers on lanky stems that can grow over 8 feet tall.

Hollyhocks are a biennial, which means they grow foliage on short stems their first year, but don't flower until the following year. To have a continuous hollyhock show, plant seeds in the same area for two consecutive years.


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Photo: Dutch Gardens, www.dutchgardens.com

Oriental Poppy

Even before they bloom, Oriental poppies attract plenty of attention. AS the large fuzzy buds emerge atop the plant's lanky stems, it's hard not to wonder what will unfurl next. When the flowers arrive, the bright papery blooms are definitely worth the wait...and the effort.

Oriental poppies can be difficult to grow, since they don't handle transplanting well and require a sunny site with soil that drains well. But in the right location, these exotic-looking flowers fill in quickly and reward you with years of enjoyment.


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Photo: RDA GID

Peony

Don't be fooled by the peony's fragile appearance. If undisturbed, these hardy plants can survive for more than a century with little or no care. Since they need cold weather to produce flowers, they grow best in areas that experience cold winters.

There are hundreds of peony hybrids, offering a wide range of sizes and colors. Herbaceous peonies completely die back to the ground in fall, then reemerge in spring. They benefit from stakes or rings to keep the plants from flopping over under the weight of their large, heavy blooms.


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Photo: RDA GID

Carnation

One of the world's oldest cultivated flowers, the carnation is appreciated for its ruffled appearance, pleasant scent, and extended blooming period. It's one of the most popular cut flowers because of its wide array of colors.


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Photo: RDA GID

Snapdragon

Despite its intimidating name, snapdragons are nothing but sweet. With spikes of unusual, five-petaled flowers in a range of solid and bicolored hues, these are distinctive and easily recognized by flower lovers everywhere.


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Photo: RDA GID

Sweet Pea

This fragrant flower is easy to grow and provides a season's worth of cut flowers. In fact, sweet peas perform best if you harvest bouquets often. Like the garden peas, sweet peas prefer the cooler weather of spring and early summer, gradually declining under hot August skies.