CHB Mail

Beautiful blooms

Feel the love with Nigella and other lovely flowers

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Flowers add beautiful vibrance and colour to any garden . . . here’s some tips to look after themand keep them flowering for longer.

Love-in-a-Mist

Romantic cottage flowers may not be the first thing that springs to mind when you hear the name Nigella! Nigella Love-in-A-Mist, is a very pretty annual flower with delicate fern like foliage and ice white blooms with rich mascara-like stamens.

In February in temperate areas (delay until autumn in cool zones), seed should be sown direct where they are to grow in a sunny or partly shaded area and covered only lightly with some seed raising mix.

Reaching 90cm tall, they make a gorgeous cottage style border or bedding plant.

Trim spent flowers regularly (or cut flowers for a vase) to encourage a longer flowering period.

A Gold Star

Bring some golden sunshine into your autumn garden, by planting a fantastic perennial called Rudbeckia “Little Goldstar”. Also known as Black Eyed Susans, rudbeckias provide several months of vibrant and cheerful colour, from late summer right through into late autumn and early winter.

Rudbeckia “Little Goldstar” is a new variety that has been bred for an abundance of gold flowers with a striking black central seed cone. It has a neat compact habit, reaching around 40cm high and wide and makes both a great container or garden bed display. They’ll enjoy growing in full sun and will tolerate low water conditions once they’re establishe­d. An added bonus is that “Little Goldstar” flowers are attractive to bees, butterflie­s and birds.

Rudbeckias can be trimmed lightly back once flowering has finished. To help keep the plants healthy, regularly apply Yates Thrive Flower Fruit Soluble Fertiliser around the root zone. It’s rich in potassium to promote lots of beautiful flowers.

Rudbeckia’s bright yellow flowers combine wonderfull­y with other warm-toned flowers like calendula and gaillardia. They can also be planted together with mauve and purple flowers like salvia and aster, to create an eye catching, contrastin­g sea of autumn colour.

Starships — Go Boldly into Your Garden…

If you’re after bold colour for a sheltered, partly shaded area in your garden then you can’t go past Cinerarias.

Yates Cineraria “Starships” is a compact variety, growing to around

30cm tall, with large flower heads in bright colourful clusters.

Cineraria seed needs light to germinate, so the very fine seed should only be pressed into trays of Yates Black Magic Seed Raising Mix, misted gently with water and kept in a warm place. For best results, cover the tray with plastic cling film to help keep the mix moist.

Seedlings can be transplant­ed out into the garden or into a pot when they are large enough to handle.

Planted en masse, cinerarias are breathtaki­ng so it’s well worth growing lots of seedlings. Cinerarias grown in shady conditions display the most intense colours and flowering potted cinerarias can be

brought indoors for a few days at a time to create a beautiful table centrepiec­e.

Flower care:

Protect new cineraria seedlings from destructiv­e snails and slugs with a light sprinkling of Yates Blitzem Snail Slug Pellets.

Once the cineraria seedlings are establishe­d, feed each week with Yates Thrive Roses Flowers Liquid Plant Food. It’s specially formulated for flowering plants, with the right balance of nutrients to encourage both healthy green leaf growth and lots of flowers.

■ For more informatio­n and inspiratio­n visit yates.co.nz

 ?? ?? Love in a mist
Love in a mist
 ?? ?? Rudbeckias
Rudbeckias
 ?? ?? Cineraria
Cineraria

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