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Creating a Colorful, Cottage Landscape Border

The time has come for my bi-annual flower bed ANNUALS replacement. And honestly, the spring switcharoo is always the most painful. Why? All winter long my pansies provide vibrant color and even in the doldrums of the cold season, it looks like a colorful spring around my cottage. But come late February and into early March, the pansies ERUPT with mounds of lush flowers and hit their peak mid-April just when I have to pull them out for replacement. I stand and watch as my landscape crew rips them out and I cry a silent tear. (Kidding of course, but it is sad in a sense.) New summer annuals are planted and then every October, the cycle repeats. The remaining summer annuals are stripped away, and winter pansies are added.

Why do I have to pull them up when they hit their prime? Because it’s essential to get the summer annuals in the ground before it gets too hot. (And in Louisiana it will be HOT in May and pansies DO NOT like hot.) So around mid April every year, my winter pansies are replaced.  And this year, they are being replaced with a colorful, pink petunia mix!

Two summers ago, I chose hot pink Wave Petunias that absolutely showed out all season long.  Can we just say CURB APPEAL?! It was a dream to have a lush colorful border completely surrounding the perimeter of my home. The ONLY drawback is that in August when the temperatures consistently stay near 100 degrees, the petunias REALLY start to play out. Someone told me (much too late) to cut back the “legs” that had spun forth.  So, I did and got a wee bit more color from some of them until it was time to replenish my beds with pansies. (In hindsight, I’ll do this earlier in August next time in hopes of getting another big burst of color to last until October.)

Because I like to switch things up in my home, last summer, rather than petunias, I opted to go with Profusion Zinnias, a dwarf variety that looked promising for a rainbow of colors.  But, unfortunately, they didn’t meet my expectations.  While they lived and thrived, we had a really wet summer, therefore they didn’t produce the color I had hoped!  And, the slugs ate the ever living daylights out of them and it was a constant battle with those little stinkers all summer.

With that being said, I’ve opted this year to return to my beloved petunias.  And rather than one solid color around the cottage, I’ve opted to add four color varieties of Wave Petunias: coral reef, pink, white and purple (which is actually more of a shade of pink).  If you follow my blog or social media accounts, you know that I have thing for pink.  I’m gradually bringing more color into my cottage, and this spring, my granny’s Franciscan Desert Rose dishes set the tone for the kitchen and main living areas of my cottage.  My goal is to let that theme flow to the outside and create a colorful pink hue border all around the perimeter of my home.

A lot of work goes into making this switch happen. It’s not as easy as pulling out the old and putting in the new.  My landscape crew basically refreshes the entire soil, adding Osmocote (or secret Chinese sauce as my landscaper calls it) to ensure big beautiful blooms.  They also trim up all my existing shrubbery to keep it neat and tidy.  And before the new plants are added, new pine straw mulch is spread and rolled. The last step is to add 28 flats of petunias, 7 of each color mentioned above, all mixed together.

And after a long day’s work, here is where these gorgeous, colorful pansies will begin their race towards summer.  In just about 4 weeks, I will have heaps and mounds of pink all around my cottage and I can’t wait to show you more!

What are your thoughts? I’d love to hear your suggestions, feedback and comments on my annual selections. I’m always eager to learn from you!

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