Armeria

home garden

Search powered by Google

Garden guide
Home

Home garden - Sections articles:


Home garden

Garden Design

Garden Plans

Design & Decorating ideas

Flowers, Garden plants

Garden magazines

Garden books

Medicinal Plants

  Home & Garden Video

Cactus and succulents

Vegetables and fruits

Fruit trees

Trees and shrubs

About nature

Caring plants

Pests and diseases

  Health & Fitness Video

Recipes

Cocktails

Health news

Medical guide

Nutrition

Diets, Losing Weight

Vitamins

Photo galleries


Home > Flowers, Garden plants > Armeria
Print
 | 
Send

Armeria


ArmeriaArmeria
Perennial

USDA Zones: 4 - 8
Light: full sun Zones 4 to 5; light shade best Zones 6 to 8
Height:  6 to 12 inches
Width:  6 to 12 inches
Flower Colors: blooms mainly in pinks, reds, whites; shades of blue available
Bloom Time: late spring - summer
Special Features:
Attracts Hummingbirds
Easy to Grow
Flowers
Tolerates Drought

This deceptively dainty plant is quite tough, withstanding drought, poor soils, and sea spray with ease. It's also a long-blooming perennial. It forms low mounds of light-green, grassy, evergreen foliage from which 6- to 12-inch stalks arise -- topped with deep pink, white, crimson, or purple globe-shaped clusters of small flowers. The majority of blooms appear in late spring or early summer, but in mild-winter areas blooming often restarts in late fall and continues during winter. Thrift is a good ground cover, an edging plant in the front of a perennial garden, or a plant for rock or wall gardens. And as its name suggests, it's the ideal plant for seaside gardens, tolerating salty sea spray. It also attracts hummingbirds.

Notable Varieties
'Alba' bears white flowers on 6-inch stems.
'Laucheana' has deep red flowers.
'Pride of Dusseldorf' is a deep pink almost red variety.

Care
Needs extremely well-drained, preferably sandy soil with just moderate moisture; drought-tolerant. Plant in full sun in soils with average fertility; rich soil produces loose, open plants that have trouble surviving the winter. Encourage lengthy bloom by removing flowers as they fade.

Planting
Plant established plants 12 inches apart anytime. Divide clumps every several years in spring or fall to maintain vigorous growth.

Pests and Diseases
May die in center in damp soil or hot, humid climates. Cut back to ground to stimulate new growth if this occurs.

Print
 | 
Send


  Articles in Flowers, Garden plants

6 Indoor Plants That Love The Dark
Flowers Are A Great Gift
Blue Flowers Add Style And Color To Any Garden
Miniature Roses Have Many Uses
When And How To Prune Roses
Planting Bare Root Roses
Plan Before Buying Rose Bushes
Bare Root Roses
A Classic Southern Beauty Now Blooms In The North
Guide To Bonsai Growing
6 Styling Tips For Your Fresh Cut Flowers
6 Most Common Dangers To Roses And Their Fix
6 Indoor Plants That Love The Dark: A Tip From The Garden Center Nursery
6 Easy Tips On How To Care For Your Plants
5 Tips For Planting Roses
See all list


  Other Home Garden Articles:

How To Dig A Hole For Black Eyed Susans
Gardens
Japanese Gardens In Japanese Decorating
What To Expect With Perennial Flowers
Why Grow A Bonsai?
Estate Fencing: Beauty And Function
A Useful Tool. Garden Roto Tiller
When Buy Flowers And Flower Arrangement Online
Cold Hardy Palm Trees For Landscapes In Southern States – Zones 8-11
Rustic Country Garden Decor - Not Just For The Country
Woodpecker Bird Feeders
Canna Lily Sales Face A Chaotic Future
Patios, Outdoor Lifestyles Lead 2006 Home Improvement Trends
Guide To Bonsai Tools
Ergonomics 101: Mowing Smart, Not Hard
Decorative Gardens And Garden Fountains Of The Cistercians
Worm Compost Bin
Why You Should Consider Gardening For Your Children
Starting A Container Garden
Bring The Smell Of Nature Into Your Home With These Fragrant Flowers
Gardening Without Pests
Why The Perennial Plant Survives Through The Winter
Indoor Gardening With Foliage Plants
All About Riding Lawn Mowers
Gardening Information And Design Ideas
Tree Pruning Tips
Turnip Cabbage
Sunchoke
Red maple
Leadwort
Baptisia australis
Goutweed
Heliotrope
Caladium
African daisy
Gut tissue also harbours HIV virus
Alcohol and our health
Vodka & cola
Lettuce
Kiwi


  
webgardenguide.com



All right reserved © Webgardenguide.com