Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Plants for a Purple Garden

If you like the color purple, then you'll love the beauties in this Top 10. Plant this mix of annuals and perennials to bring intensity and majesty to your displays.

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Photo: Bluestone Perennials, www.bluestoneperennials.com

Bugleweed

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


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Photo: Bluestone Perennials, www.bluestoneperennials.com

Butterfly bush

Though its exuberant profile can be fairly informal, this plant is a staple in many hummingbird gardens. The blooms also easily attract birds and butterflies with their arching branches of vibrant flower clusters.

While it may seem like hummingbirds flock to the blooms for the sweet fragrance, it's actually the plant's nectar that makes it so attractive to the birds.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Clematis

You say "clem-aye-tis," I say "clem-aah-tis." It really doesn't matter how you pronounce it, one word best describes this vine-dazzling!

Clematis grows up more than out, which means you get more flowers in less yard space. And they're actually easy to grow and train, which makes them perfect for decorating a mailbox, lamppost, arbor or trellis.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Crocus

Crocuses often start peeking through the soil when snow is still in the forecast, providing a welcome shot of color when few other flowers are in bloom.

With cup-shaped flowers atop stout stems, crocuses make a lovely addition for the front of a flowerbed or border. They require little care to produce year after year.


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Photo: Terra Nova Nurseries, www.terranovanurseries.com

Coral bells

Striking, often colorful foliage, dainty flowers, and an adaptable nature make coral bells a sure winner for just about any yard.


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Photo: Bluestone Perennials, www.bluestoneperennials.com

Hydrangea

Hydrangeas often conjure up memories of Grandma's garden. These showy shrubs have long been a favorite of gardeners looking for an easy-care plant that flowers even in partial shade.


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Photo: Bluestone Perennials, www.bluestoneperennials.com

Lavender

Gardeners know that there's never a dull moment with lavender's lovely and fragrant blooms.

Lavender has stiff gray-green leaves on mounding plants that are often taller than they are wide. The hauntingly fragrant flower spikes come in various shades of purple as well as plain white and attract many butterflies, especially skippers, painted ladies, and sulphurs.


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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: RDA GID

Petunia

It's no wonder petunias are one of the most popular garden flowers-they come in a dazzling array of colors, shapes, and sizes, are easy to grow and tolerate all sorts of weather and soil conditions.

Intense hybridizing has led to the plethora of petunias available today, and there are more varieties being developed each year. To keep things in order, petunias are divided into several categories-multiflora, grandiflora, floribunda, milliflora and spreading, notably the popular, award-winning Wave petunias.


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Photo: RDA GID

Salvia

Want your summer gardens to kick off with a bang and end with a grand finale? Then plant purple salvia, a beauty that'll light up your yard all summer.

There are few garden flowers as bold or reliable as these brilliant spikes. Many gardeners know the plant for its red blooms (which has earned it the name firecracker plant), but the purple can be a great addition to the garden. They stand at attention in a large border garden and are just as striking when confined to containers. And they provide the perfect color for your purple garden masterpiece.