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
-
-
June calendar
It is the time to mulch that vegetable garden you have been growing. Also, to help...
Get The Checklist
-
-
-
name that plant
Post your puzzlers and help others with theirs.
Start Here
-
-
Trending Posts
-
1
Sweet Olive (Osmanthus) – Identification
-
2
Sago Palm – Thin Fronds in Low Light
-
3
St Augustine – Weed Control
-
4
Red Insects – On Plants in Spring (wheel bug vs leaf-footed bug)
-
5
My Crapemyrtle Is Bringing Ants
-
1
Gardening in Georgia (Your Southern Garden) – TV Shows
-
2
How to Soil Test
-
3
Pine straw – Weed control
-
4
Mixing Fescue and Rye – Good or Bad?
-
5
Treehoppers under sunflower leaves, gardener bitten by carpenter ant
-
-
Advertisement
-
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 Azalea Tomatoes Moisture Poison Pears Hydrangea Glyphosate Caterpillar Pests Cherry Roundup Irrigation Pesticide Pre-Emergent Stone Dogwood Peach Spider Pine Straw Magnolia Greenhouse Squash Squirrels Lemon Travel Beans Poisonous