The Morning Call (Sunday)

It’s time to celebrate your annuals

Such plants are like loyal friends every gardener can use

- By Jessica Damiano Jessica Damiano writes the award-winning Weekly Dirt Newsletter and regular gardening columns for The Associated Press.

Summer annuals are the champions of the late-season garden.

Perennials are the majority residents in my flower gardens, and each year I welcome the reliable, repeat performers when they arrive to spend summer like dear old friends who come to visit. Most bloom intermitte­ntly from late spring through August, but as I flip my calendar to September, it’s apparent that many of them have one foot out the door.

However, the annuals that share their beds don’t care that Halloween decoration­s are appearing in the stores or that pumpkin spice lattes are back. They’re still showing up every day like it’s mid-July.

I didn’t always plant annuals in the ground, instead relegating a few seasonal purchases of petunias, impatiens and calibracho­as to hanging baskets and window boxes. But I always regretted that decision when the shoulder season between summer and fall crept in. This year, the annual Beacon impatiens, Superbena verbenas and Queen Lime zinnias I planted in spring are carrying the late-season garden.

True annuals or tender perennials

True annuals, like zinnias and marigolds, are plants that complete their entire life cycles, from seed to senescence — or death — in one year. They exist to reproduce, sometimes self-sowing, or dropping seeds on the ground that sprout the following year. But those secondyear

plants are offspring, not a reemergenc­e of last season’s annuals.

Most plants regarded as annuals in four-season regions are actually tender perennials from the tropics that can’t withstand frosts and freezes.

Popular tender perennials grown as annuals include browallia, celosia, impatiens, lantana, Madagascar periwinkle, snapdragon and Pelargoniu­m, the annual commonly called “geranium” (not to be confused with the perennial Geranium commonly called “cranesbill”).

Pros and cons of annuals

Over the past few years, I’ve grown to appreciate

annuals and tender perennials as the garden workhorses they are. None of this waxing and waning stuff — most bloom nonstop from spring straight through frost, relentless­ly holding down the fort while their perennial bedmates take intermitte­nt rests.

Of course, there are downsides. Some annuals require regular deadheadin­g, the removal of unsightly spent blooms, to prevent seed production that would divert their energy away from blooming.

But in recent years, breeders have been developing “self-cleaning” varieties that eliminate the need for this chore, and

those are worth seeking out.

Although they are less expensive than perennials, annual plants must be purchased yearly. That cost can become prohibitiv­e, especially for those gardening on large properties.

But after the perennials start winding down, as is happening right now in my own garden, both types of annuals will remain loyal until breathing their final, frosty breath, likely sometime in November. And that’s the type of friend every garden can use.

 ?? JESSICA DAMIANO/AP PHOTOS ?? A border of Beacon Pink Lipstick impatiens thrives. The plants carry the late-summer garden as hardy perennials begin to fade.
JESSICA DAMIANO/AP PHOTOS A border of Beacon Pink Lipstick impatiens thrives. The plants carry the late-summer garden as hardy perennials begin to fade.
 ?? ?? These annuals, Pink Cashmere Superbenas, continue to bloom in late August in a garden in Long Island, New York.
These annuals, Pink Cashmere Superbenas, continue to bloom in late August in a garden in Long Island, New York.

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