Is It Too Late To Plant Perennials?
Q: Is it too late to plant perennials?
A: Perennials can be planted throughout the winter as long as the ground is not frozen. This rarely happens. You can install new perennials or divide and move existing landscape plants whenever working outdoors is comfortable. Daylily, hosta, and peony plants are easy to unearth, divide, and plant once again.
-
Advertisement
-
Follow Walter
-
Advertisement
-
-
May calendar
The sun is coming out, so wearing hats and sunscreen are a must. Plant Rosemary, Dill,...
Get The Checklist
-
-
-
name that plant
Post your puzzlers and help others with theirs.
Start Here
-
-
Trending Posts
-
1
Japanese Bloodgrass
-
2
Rose – Flowers Change Color
-
3
Pecan Trees Dropping Nuts Early
-
4
Squash
-
5
Topiary Azaleas – How to Plant
-
1
How to Grow Ferns from Spores
-
2
Fescue – Pythium Blight
-
3
DIGGING AND STORING TENDER BULBS
-
4
To diagnose plant problems, follow the angles
-
5
Oak – Gouty Gall
-
-
Walter’s Bookshelf
Browse and purchase gardening books by Walter Reeves, plus select titles by other authors.
View books -
Popular topics
Soil Spring Summer Seed Winter Fall Flowers Weed Fertilizer Disease Shade Temperature Pots Oak Pine Pruning Mulch Watering Container Maple Compost Birds Herbicide Tomatoes Azalea Moisture Poison Pears Hydrangea Glyphosate Caterpillar Pests Cherry Roundup Irrigation Pre-Emergent Pesticide Stone Dogwood Peach Spider Pine Straw Greenhouse Magnolia Squash Squirrels Lemon Travel Beans Japanese Maple