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         Perennial Gardening:     more books (100)
  1. Perennial Ground Covers by David MacKenzie, 2002-07-01
  2. Designing with Perennials by Pamela Harper, 2001-06-30
  3. Garden Color: Annuals and Perennials (Sunset Gardening) by Sunset, 1981-02
  4. 10 Easy-Care Perennials (Storey Country Wisdom Bulletin, a-235) by Marcella Schaffer, 2001-01-04
  5. Perennials: The Definitive Reference With Over 2,500 Photographs by Roger Phillips, Martyn Rix, 2008-02-15
  6. Herbaceous Perennial Plants: A Treatise on Their Identification, Culture, and Garden Attributes by Allan M. Armitage, 2008-05
  7. The Perennial Garden: Color Harmonies Through the Seasons by Jeff Cox, Marilyn Cox, 1992-03-15
  8. Perennials (DK Garden Guides) by Richard Rosenfeld, 2004-01-12
  9. The Big Book of Northwest Perennials: Choosing, Growing, Tending by Marty Wingate, 2005-01-21
  10. Taylor's Guide to Perennials by Barbara Ellis, 2001-02-20
  11. Perennial Companions: 100 Dazzling Plant Combinations for Every Season by Tom Fischer, 2009-02-18
  12. How to Grow Annuals & Perennials by Richard Bird, 2007-03-25
  13. The Perennial Killer: A Gardening Mystery (Gardening Mysteries) by Ann Ripley, 2000-05
  14. Perennial Plants for Profit or Pleasure: How to Grow Perennial Flowers and Herbs for Profit or Personal Landscape Use by Francis X. Jozwik, 2000-08

81. National Gardening - The Name Gardeners Trust For Flowers, Houseplants, Composti
appeal and modest demands make this littleknown perennial a garden Published bythe National gardening Association www.garden.org, www.kidsgardening.com.
http://www.garden.org/articles/scripts/articles.taf?id=702

82. National Gardening - The Name Gardeners Trust For Flowers, Houseplants, Composti
Herb gardening Guide Featured Pest Whiteflies Visit our Pest Control Library. CuttingBack perennials I have a new perennial garden that I started last fall
http://www.garden.org/
Send this image as an e-card. GO National Garden Month Activities Gardeners Garden Reflections Educators Learning with Roses Awards ... Get a "Power of Gardening" Banner
Greenroofs: An Inteview with Linda Velazquez
Mountains and Plants What's new on Kidsgardening: Seeds Welcoming Wildlife: Cultivating Schoolyard Habitats
Plant Creeping Phlox
Plant creeping phlox now in a sunny location on the edge of a bed or in a rock garden. This low-growing perennial produces fragrant blue, white, or pink flowers and forms a 1- to 2-foot diameter mat. Food Gardening Guides
Vegetable Gardening Guide
Fruit Gardening Guide

Herb Gardening Guide

Featured Pest:
Whiteflies

Visit our Pest Control Library Cascading Balcony Plants I have a balcony in full sun with planters along the railings. Can you suggest some plants that will cascade down and bloom profusely throughout the summer? I have an image in my mi... more Featured Report: Northern California Always Annuals also: Soil Prep Garden Tools Question: What percentage of your own food do you grow? (Choose one.)

83. BBC - Gardening - How To Be A Gardener - Problem Solving - Perennial Weeds
Weedkiller game, Brush up on annual and perennial weeds and refresh your reflexes,with the weedkiller Find thousands more plants in the BBC gardening database.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/gardening/htbg/module6/perennial_weeds1.shtml

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THURSDAY
10th April 2003
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BBC Homepage
Lifestyle Gardening ... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! Perennial weeds Perennial weeds are more of a problem because they can live for several years. They survive the winter by storing food in their roots. These roots make them harder to get rid of than annual weeds. Some are difficult to dig out and others spread underground. If you leave even the tiniest piece of root in the soil when you dig them out, you’ll get a whole new plant. To control:
  • Dig out perennial weeds as soon as you see them. So long as you don’t let them produce leaves, the roots will use up their energy stores and eventually die. Never rotavate soils with perennial weed infestations as it is a brilliant way of propagating them! Always dig out every little bit as they will regrow and often with twice the vigour.
  • If you don’t mind using chemicals, treat them with a weedkiller containing glyphosate.
  • Never put perennial weed roots or seed-heads on to the compost heap.
Brush up on annual and perennial weeds and refresh your reflexes, with the

84. Annual Vines - Taylor's Gardening Guides
from the Taylor's gardening Guides Annuals. soil Bears clusters of orangered, orange,red, pink, or yellow flowers from summer to fall Tender perennial or warm
http://www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com/taylors/advice/annualvines.shtml
Quick-Growing Flowering Annual Vines from the Taylor's Gardening Guides Annuals
COBAEA SCANDENS
Cup-and-saucer Vine, Cathedral Bells
Size: Vine, can reach 40 feet
Produces fragrant, bell-shaped flowers sitting in ruffled green cups from summer to fall
ECCREMOCARPUS SCABER
Chilean Glory Vine
Size: Vine, can reach 10 to 15 feet
Bears clusters of orange-red, orange, red, pink, or yellow flowers from summer to fall Tender perennial or warm-weather annual
IPOMOEA ALBA
Moonflower
Size: Vine, to 15 feet
evenly moist soil Bears large, fragrant white flowers that open at dusk from early or midsummer to frost Warm-weather annual or tender perennial IPOMOEA NIL 'EARLY CALL' Morning Glory Size: Vine, to 15 feet evenly moist soil Bears white-tubed flowers in shades of pale to deep blue, plus red, purple, or white from midsummer to fall Warm-weather annual or tender perennial IPOMOEA X MULTIFIDA Cardinal Climber Size: Vine, from 3 to 6 feet

85. Fine Gardening Back Issues
Grow Heaths for ColdWeather Color, Odd Pods and Sensational Seed Heads, From WoodedLot to Woodland Path, gardening in Harmony Grow the perennial with Big Ears
http://www.taunton.com/store/pages/backissue_fg.asp
YOU ARE HERE: Fine Gardening Fine Gardening Back Issues Entire Site Fine Gardening A selection of great information from our Magazines, Books, and Videos. Garden Design
Perennials

Annuals

The Kitchen Garden
...
Pests and Diseases

Valuable supplements to the information you'll find in the pages of Fine Gardening. Witch Hazels Perk Up the Winter Season
Fine Gardening
Container Design Challenge
more...
...
more...

Browse our online catalog of in-depth, how-to information. Garden Design Landscaping
Links
Over The Fence Forum ... Events Put authoritative gardening information at your fingertips. Fill the gaps in your Fine Gardening reference libr ary. Now you can stock up on the back issues you need. We have selected Fine Gardening back issues available at $6.99 each, and these mint-condition back issues are fresher than anything you'll turn up at your local flea market. Check off the issues you want to buy below. Then click the button at the end to add them to your secure shopping cart and review your order. Click on the issue number for a more detailed table of contents. To find a specific topic, key in "Ctrl-F" and do a Keyword Search. Canadian residents add 7% GST. Connecticut residents add 6% sales tax.

86. Gay Gardener - Gardening - Perennial, Annual & Bulb Feature Of The Month
poems Quotes lots of gardening quotesnew and old. GARDEN-SPOT. Bulbs Tubers growing info Feature of Month bulb perennial perennials growing info.
http://www.gaygardener.com/gardenspot/feature.phtml
GARDEN-SPOT
Translate this page to: Spanish French German Italian Portuguese SiteMap
GARDENING
Events Calendar

...list of upcoming gardening events
Feature

...articles on the garden - landscape
Forum

History

...gardening in Colonial America
Poems
...a collection of gardening poems Quotes ...lots of gardening quotes-new and old GARDEN-SPOT ...growing info Feature of Month Perennials ...growing info MISC INFO Whats New ...latest info added Odds and Ends ...gardeners grab-bag Zone Map ...US zone info ALL THE REST GARDEN MALL FUN STUFF GARDEN WEB PHOTOS ... CONTACT US Gay Gardener FEATURES OF THE MONTH PERENNIAL Hardy Gloxinia BULBS Clivia WILDFLOWERS Jack-in-the-pulpit BULBS INDEX PERENNIAL INDEX QUOTE SAMPLER The best attitude to have is gratitude. TOP OF PAGE Thursday, April 10th 2003. A Flowers View portfolio of flower photos A Flowers View Garden WEB Our Garden Web To Do Lists Jan Feb Mar Apr ... Dec Have you checked out our bi-monthly newsletter the Archives Check out the...

87. Fall Gardening
For additional seasonal gardening advice, refer to United States Department of Agriculture ina cool climate Divide spring and summer blooming perennial plants
http://www.mygreathome.com/homeliving/gardening/fall_gardeng/fall_gardeng.htm
Cooking
Snacking tips

Cooking archives
Gardening ... E-mail this page to a friend Fall gardening tips for beginners and green-thumbs Fall is a great time to plant spring blooming bulbs, divide and replant perennials, introduce new plants, shrubs and trees - or rejuvenate a skimpy lawn with healthy new blends of grass seed. So, whether you're a novice or savvy gardener, dig in and start your fall planting. Performing a few of these end-of-season garden chores will pay off with beautiful blooms and a thicker lawn in spring and summer. Planting bulbs
Dividing perennial plants

Transplanting shrubs and trees

Maintaining your lawn
...
Sources of fall gardening information and web links
Fall Gardening Checklist Here are regional guidelines for fall planting and garden maintenance in both cool and warm climates. For additional seasonal gardening advice, refer to United States Department of Agriculture hardiness zone maps at a local library. Or, log onto the USDA's Web site at www.usda.gov/news/garden.htm, to find your area's plant hardiness zone and planting recommendations. You can also contact your state and county extension service for more information about what and when to plant in fall. Neighborhood nurseries and garden centers can be another good source of information - they usually stock plants appropriate to local climate conditions.

88. Dividing Perennial Plants
Dividing perennial plants. The best candidates for division are perennial plantsthat have large, healthy clumps and have been in the ground several years.
http://www.mygreathome.com/homeliving/gardening/fall_gardeng/dividing_perennials
Cooking
Snacking tips

Cooking archives
Gardening ... E-mail this page to a friend Dividing perennial plants Planting bulbs
Dividing perennial plants

Transplanting shrubs and trees

Maintaining your lawn
...
Sources of fall gardening information and web links
Have you noticed your Iris or Black-Eyed Susan looking a little pale or your prize Chrysanthemum beginning to outgrow its space? Is your Daylily, Peony, Primrose, Poppy or Aster dying out in the center? If so, fall is the right time to divide and replant these or other spring and summer blooming plants that grow back year after year. Dividing established perennials during autumn months is the easiest and quickest way to make them healthier - while gaining new plants for your garden or for sharing with your neighbors. The best candidates for division are perennial plants that have large, healthy clumps and have been in the ground several years. To divide your perennials:
  • Try to divide dormant perennials on a cloudy day when the weather is dry, making sure each plant division has more roots than shoots.
  • 89. Garden Articles
    Planting Dahlias and other June gardening Tips. Visiting perennial Gardens and otherAugust gardening Tips. The Midas Touch (flowers with gold foliage, flowers).
    http://pss.uvm.edu/ppp/articleS.htm
    Perry's Perennial Pages
    Articles relating to flowers, perennials
    New Winter Spring Summer ... Anytime The following articles are largely taken from Green Mountain Gardener news columns issued in the past from the University of Vermont, and include those on perennials and related flower topics arranged by season. Articles appropriate any season are arranged further by topics.Author names are listed for contact purposes, as some of the articles have been adapted from other sources.
    Articles may also be searched by keywords or phrases using Articles are provided for educational purposes and may be reprinted unaltered without prior permission, provided credit is given to the authors and UVM Extension as the source. Notice of their use and publication, however, would be appreciated and can be sent to leonard.perry@uvm.edu Articles are listed below by season appropriate to Vermont and similar regions in USDA hardiness zone 4 (don't know your zone? check the above Links page for zone finders). For each hardiness zone warmer add a couple weeks in fall, and subtract a couple weeks in spring for approximate dates. In other words, activities for late September in zone 4 might be done 4 weeks later in zone 6, and activities for early May in zone 4 might be done 4 weeks sooner in zone 6. Time of season, such as early or late, are indicated next to article names where appropriate.

    90. Internet Directory For Botany: Gardening
    Leelanau Grower's Almanac, Michigan, USA. Northern Climate gardening.Master Gardener, perennial Gardener and Fruit Grower Chapters.
    http://www.botany.net/IDB/subject/bothort.html
    INTERNET DIRECTORY FOR BOTANY: GARDENING
    Original location of this page: http://www.helsinki.fi/kmus/bothort.html NB. Horticultural Societies are listed on a separate page, as also arboreta and botanical gardens , and newsgroups related to garden plants.

    91. Perennial Bulbs - Best Of The Best
    BULBS. perennial Bulbs Best of the Best Best choices for the widestrange of growing conditions in the US. DEB SIMPSON. perennial
    http://gardening.about.com/library/weekly/bestbulbs/blbestbulbsintro.htm
    zfp=-1 About Gardening Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
    Gardening
    with Deborah Simpson
    Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS KNOW Your Roses Online Catalogs Equivalents ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
    Subscribe to our newsletter.
    Advertising Free Credit Report
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    Advertisement
    BULBS Perennial Bulbs - Best of the Best
    Best choices for the widest range of growing conditions in the U.S. DEB SIMPSON PERENNIAL BULBS are flowering bulbs that, once planted and established, will return year after year, often multiplying, to provide successive seasons of rewarding spring color.
    Actually, most bulbs are, by definition, perennials. But not all will come back readily year after year in every setting. Soil, climatic and other conditions all play a part in determining which bulbs will be the best repeat performers in any given environment.
    The good news is that there are thousands of spring bloomers that will thrive in a wide variety of garden conditions. Some, including many tulip varieties, are best treated as annuals. Others will do well for several years before diminishing. Still others will make themselves right at home and "naturalize" into the landscape.

    92. The Green Line - News On Gardening, Health & Nutrition From The University Of Il
    News on gardening, health and nutrition from the University of Illinois Extension.Category Home Gardens Resources...... Spring 2000 perennial Plant of the Year Fertilizing Your Lawn in Spring An EssentialNutrient Asparagus Queen of Spring Vegetables gardening My Cousin
    http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/greenline/

    Drusilla Banks

    Ron Wolford

    Subscription
    Information
    November-December 2002
    Hort Shorts
    Hort Tips Selecting a Christmas Tree All-America Selection Winners 2003 ... Cornish Game Hens for the Holidays September-October 2002
    Hort Shorts
    Hort Tips Plant Daffodils Now for a Burst of Spring Color Prepare Houseplants for Trip Back Indoors ... Fresh Apple Walnut Cake August 2002
    What Is Killing My Tree?
    Controlling Creeping Charlie Home Lawn Fertilization Watch Out for Wasps ... Did You Know? July 2002
    Few Tips on Watering
    Weed Identification and Control Dutch Elm Disease Showing Now! Rose Stem Disease ... Did You Know... June 2002
    Dividing Bearded Irises
    Hardy Hydrangeas Watering Guide for Home Gardeners Organic Mulches ... Did You Know? Spring 2002
    Establishment of Turf
    Alternatives to Grass for Light-Challenged Locations Treated Wood Being Phased Out Putting Houseplants Outdoors for Summer ... Did You Know? November-December 2001 Protect Your Home From Homesteading Animals With a Chimney Cap Tomatoes: Planning for 2002 2002 All-America (AAS) Flower Award Winners (Part 1) Lawn Care Calendar ... Out, Out, Damn Spot: Removing Holiday Food Stains

    93. Gardening Tips, Advice And How-To Instruction.
    Loving perennials Sowing perennial Seeds Starting Seed Starting Seed Part ThreePeonies in the garden and how to grow them easily. Articles on Water gardening.
    http://www.simplegiftsfarm.com/marticle.html
    Gardening Tips, Advice and
    How to Instruction
      Home More articles Doug's Books
      I write a free gardening newsletter that you can sign up for right here. It comes out several times a month with a new article and other tips and pointers for improving your garden. Subscribers get the articles before they're posted here plus other freebies that I pass along. Easy instructions to unsub with every issue if you want to get off the list. I'm a gardener and garden writer - you're invited to join me. More details here.
      Enter a relevant word or term into the search box below (then click on the search button)and you'll get a report on articles found here on my site. Only click once! To get back to this page, you'll either have to use your back key or click on any searched article and use the links on the article pages.
      Articles on Annuals Impatiens is a virtue Information on different impatiens species and a short description on growing them..
      Breeding your own Shirley Poppies.
      A short course on an easy way to obtain custom flowers.
      How To Buy Bedding Plants
      The title says it all.

    94. The Virtual Gardener
    A home garden magazine for gardens and gardeners. Heirloom seeds garden books children's books. Helping Category Home Gardens Resources News and Media Books...... The three are Athyrium niponicum 'Pictum' an easy and colorful shade perennial;Coreopsis rosea 'Sweet Dreams' - one of a Have a question about gardening?
    http://www.gardenmag.com/
    Volume 7
    Number 3
    Winter 2002/03
    Our Winter 2002 issue will continue with a major change in our publishing policies. We hope to be introducing a subscription policy (subject to our webmaster being able to set up the appropriate coding). During the next three months the site will become password protected. We have refrained from doing this in the past - choosing to publish free of charge. However, it is no longer possible to continue in this way. We hope that the information you have been receiving will be worth the small subscription fee. The Cover Story will present an overview of five popular winter flowering plants. These will include: Poinsettias, Christmas Cactus, Cyclamen, Chrysanthemums and Japanese Azaleas.
    More...
    In the Features we will be presenting another two great articles by our bug expert - Arzeena. First an article about managing mildew with milk, the second on the vexing winter problem of Fungus Gnats on the soil surface of our house plants.
    More...

    95. Home And Garden Television: Perennials
    perennial Power gardening by the Yard Episode GBY604 More Projects »Photo Give perennials a little time to get started and they'll take off.
    http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/gl_plants_perennials/article/0,1785,HGTV_3610_1387870,0
    Site Shortcuts TV Specials Special Online Features Home Finance Center Calculators Make HGTV Your Start Page Quilt Block of the Month Needle Crafts Gardening Basics Mosaic Madness Faux Finishing Design Styles Entertaining Organizing About Us Site Map Homepage
    Program Guide
    Shows A - Z Decorating Remodeling ... Shop SEARCH
    GARDENING
    Books / Videos
    Bulbs / Seeds

    Cacti / Succulents
    ...
    Wildlife

    Perennial Power
    Gardening by the Yard : Episode GBY-604

    Give perennials a little time to get started and they'll take off. This purple coneflower ( Echinacea purpurea ) was planted a few days before this picture was taken.
    These three purple coneflowersshown just before floweringare a year old.
    While creating a great garden does take time, it doesn't take nearly as much time as you might think, especially when you've got perennials on your side. If plants like where they're planted and get plenty of water and fertilizer, they will flourish. Perennials tend to just sit during the first year after planting and then take off in their second and third years. This year's planting of 'Huskers Red' penstemon.

    96. Timber Press Books On Gardening And Horticulture
    for a shrubbery (shrub border), an annual bed, and a perennial garden are
    http://www.timber-press.com/excerpts/weekly.cfm

    97. Gardening Resources, Cornell College Of Agriculture And Life Sciences
    Home gardening Lawn - Includes video/slideslows, calendar, email tips, and Herbaceousperennial pictures - Hundreds of colorful herbaceous perennial images
    http://www.hort.cornell.edu/gardening/
    Cornell University Department of Horticulture : Gardening resources
    Department of Horticulture
    Gardening resources
    GreenhouseCam
    Search:

    Help
    Hot news: Learn grafting at home Cornell's award-winning non-credit course for gardeners, The How When and Why of Grafting Starts 3/17/03. Updated: Vegetable Varieties for 2003 Find varieties for NY gardens. ( .pdf version Weather info: Frost, growing degree days, hardi-
    ness, microclimates, radar, precipitation, drought info.
    New: Viburnum leaf beetle citizen science Favorite plants of
    Master Gardeners
    Plant Health Care
    A basis for IPM
    Master Gardener Program
    Junior Master Gardener Program Deer Defenses Using organic matter in the garden ...
    ALB or Not ALB?
    Topics on this page: Come visit! Local help Pests, disease, weeds, nuisance wildlife, IPM, poisonous plants Lawns, flowers, ...
    Cornell squash named All-America Selection
    Cornell's Bush Delicata is tasty, disease-resistant, and bred from an heirloom. Hot Book: Tales from the Underground: A Natural History of Subterranean Life - From soil-dwelling bacteria to prairie dogs, Cornell plant ecologist David Wolfe explains how the pieces of the soil puzzle fit together. Entertaining and informative.

    98. Colorscapes Greenhouse - HomePage; Grower, Specializing In Perennials For Northe
    Specializing in perennials gardening in Northern Nevada
    http://www.colorscapesgreenhouse.com
    WELCOME TO OUR WEBSITE!
    This site is intended to share ideas about gardening in Northern Nevada.
    The greenhouse and nursery will open for the season in April. Until then, we hope you will continue to visit us online and keep in touch via emails. Our Email Address is:
    colorscapes@citlink.net

    The Availability List provides a picture gallery of perennials for the 2003 season. Including...
    Copy and paste your favorites to create a garden design.
    Every year I find three or four more books to add to my 'Inform and Inspire' collection. Most start out as titles checked out from the local library; books that keep my attention and know I'll refer back to including...
    The Complete Garden Guide by Time Life Books
    The Undaunted Garden by Lauren Springer
    40 Professional Designs For Do-It-Yourselfers
    Beds and Borders 40 Professional Designs For Do-It-Yourselfers The Backyard Landscaper The Gardener's Encyclopedia of Plants and Flowers by Lance Hattatt The Well-Tended Perennial Garden Book by Tracy DiSabato-Aust Manual of Woody Landscape Plants by Michael A. Dirr

    99. In The Country Garden & Gifts -- Specializing In Hostas & Water Plants, Perennia
    Specializing in hostas and water plants, perennials and homespun gifts. Includes extensive photo galleries, a gardening forum, and water gardening and hosta articles.
    http://www.inthecountrygardenandgifts.com/
    Last Update: April 6, 2003 Home E-News Visit Us E-Mail ... Contact Us Get To Know Us
    Get the Scoop
    Hostas
    Ponds
    Gifts
    Community
    How do you like our website's new layout?
    It's great! Much better than the old site. I prefer the old layout. I never saw the old site, so I can't compare. Results Business Hours Open for the Season! Tuesday-Sunday
    Events at a Glance April 26 Spring in the Country Open House May 3 Indian Creek Nature Center Plant Sale 9am-noon (Marion) Norton's A Day in the Country June 21 Hyper-Tufa Trough Planting Workshop Current Discussions 2003 Hosta Listing
    2003 Hosta Listing

    Hosta Photo Gallery ...
    Christmas Open House... ... Water Garden Gallery... Recent Updates April 6 Updated Garden Journal March 31 Posted Spring Newsletter Update Log Welcome to In The Country! This is Hosta Country! Our Spring 2003 Newsletter in now online! Plans for our Second Annual Spring in the Country Open House are underway... Sunday, April 6, 2003 ~ April Fools It looks like the joke is on us! Last week we were enjoying sunshine and temperatures in the 80's. Now we're below freezing and waiting for a snow storm...definitely not my idea of a funny joke!! Not much we can do about it. At least it won't last long...it is supposed to be in the 60's again by the end of the week. Read more Who we are...

    100. Water Gardening Information.
    A mail order retail online garden center. All facets of pondkeeping, extensive variety of plant material Category Shopping Home and Garden Water Gardens...... A modest investment of time and money will reward you with long lasting beauty thisyear and next year. The internet is a fantastic water gardening resource.
    http://www.daydreamergardens.com/
    Looking for Scarves?
    Click the tassels.
    Favorite Links:
    Pond Pals

    International

    Water Gardening

    at Suite 101
    ...
    Society
    Never fear! It is possible to install a back yard water garden without a large investment of money and time. You can have the tinkling water fall, the vivid colorful fish, the pleasant buzz of night-time frog melodies and, yes, even the dragon flies for the price a nice dinner and theatre tickets. Then you can watch a Frog Ballet every spring and summer evening in your own backyard. A modest investment of time and money will reward you with long lasting beauty this year and next year. The internet is a fantastic water gardening resource. Up until about six years ago the novice water gardener was stuck with the limited knowledge of local dirt garden nurseries and ordering plants from the two largest water garden mail order dealers. Now there are literally thousands of people on the internet who sell water lilies, lotus, and other aquatic plants. At one time Daydreamer Aquatic gardens offered over 600 different types and varieties of these plants. Daydreamer no longer sells plants via mail order but we do want to give back to the community in the form of information and advice.

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