These annual zinnias are some of my children's favorite flowers in the garden. As you can see, they come in a wide array of bright, happy colors and are great for cutting. They produce flowers for months. At this time of year, they are great for mixed bouquets with dahlias and sunflowers. In my garden, I grow them primarily in the Cutting Garden to keep them away from the groundhog.
Welcome to Heirloom Gardener
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Great Cutting Flowers: Annual Zinnias
Posted by Julia Erickson at 11:55 PM
Labels: Annuals/Biennials and Perennials, Cut and Forced Flowers
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search Heirloom Gardener
Labels
- About Blogging
- Annuals/Biennials and Perennials
- Autumn Garden
- Books and Movies
- Botanical Gardens
- Bulbs and Tubers
- Children's Garden
- Chrysanthemum
- Clematis
- Container Gardening
- Crocus tommasiniasus roseus
- Cut and Forced Flowers
- Cutting and Rose Gardens
- Dahlias
- Deep Thoughts About Gardening
- Egg Garden
- Fences Arbors Walls and Paths
- Floral arrangements
- Front Border
- Fun Stories About Gardening
- Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day
- Garden Bloggers' Design Workshop
- Garden Planning
- Gardening Blogs
- Gardening Tools and Structures
- Gardening with Children
- Goldberry Hill
- Heirloom and Organic Food
- Hibiscus
- Holidays
- Hydrangeas
- Japanese Beautyberry
- Lilies
- Mixed Borders
- New Jersey / Local Interest
- Nurseries
- Online Gardening Resources
- Peonies
- Pest Control
- Picture This Photo Contest
- Piet Oudolf
- Poppies
- Propagation and Seeds
- Pruning and Maintenance
- Roses
- Seed Heads
- Self Seeders
- Shrubs
- Spring Garden
- Summer Garden
- Trees
- Wildlife in the Garden
- Winter Garden
- Zinia
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(202)
-
▼
September
(16)
- Plants for Fall Color: Planning Improvements for ...
- My Eight Year Old's Great Potato Harvest
- You Can Never Have Too Many Dahlias
- Great Cutting Flowers: Annual Zinnias
- Swallowtail Caterpillar (Pterourus glaucus)
- Annuals and Perennials to Help Save The Bees
- Busy, Busy Bumblebees
- Spider Flowers (Cleome)
- Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day: Dahlias in New Jersey...
- The Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus) emerges f...
- Flowering Tobacco (Nicotiana)
- A Great Source of Gardening Wisdom: The Local Far...
- Pictures of Some of This Year's Sunflowers
- Links to Some Great European Gardening Blogs
- Pictures of Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus) C...
- Heirloom Lilies for Fall Planting
-
▼
September
(16)
5 comments:
They are such gorgeous flowers with many shapes, sizes & colors.
Those are lovely. I didn't grow zinnias the year and I'm sorry. They are very rewarding for the amount of work they require (none;).
Marnie
Ya know, the zinnia foliage is all wilted here, but the flowers themselves still look perky. I think I will cut them and bring them in today. You have a nice variety here!
Vivid - you do have an eye for detail - beautiful stuff!!
What lovely zinnias you have. I have reserved space for them in my garden because they are such bee and butterfly magnets. But that hot color all mixed up just makes me joyous just to look at it.
Post a Comment