Plants for Summer Containers

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Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

I have this ongoing battle with the front containers. Every year I get this idea that I want to plant them up with evergreens or perennials so that we’ll have foliage and interest year after year without having to buy starts at the local garden center. But then every year I realize after a winter of neglect that the perennials (or evergreens) are miserable and sad, really need to be just planted in the ground.

I’m not good with containers, have I mentioned that? When I say that I am a low-maintenance gardener, what I mean is that I don’t maintain anything. I mean, sure, I weed from time to time, and mow as often as necessary, but otherwise? It’s a cutthroat business, this garden of mine.

So this year, I decided that enough was enough. Annuals do well all season in the containers. They are welcoming and colorful. Sure, they’ll die this fall, but you know what? That’s perfectly okay. I’ll stick some evergreen clippings in the pots for the holiday season and that will be that. Problem solved.

Life is so much easier when you just accept the reality of who you are, don’t you think?

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

I had to include some carnations. I love love love the way they smell. I put them in the post closest to the window, I’m hoping I’ll be able to smell them from inside.

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

I have eight containers in the front garden. Two by the door, two by the porch and two by the bench. I used to have two by the garage door, but this last year I moved them to the path to the gate. I still may add a pair to the garage area, but I’m not sure. I’ve run out of pots and I don’t want to buy any more! ๐Ÿ™‚ I do still have a matching pair of barrels, so maybe I’ll use those. Eventually. For now, I just have the eight.

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

I put Calibrachoa in almost all of the pots. You may have seen them marketed as “Million Bells”? They look kind of like tiny petunias and are great for pots, spilling over the edges, even in partial shade. You can see I only planted these a week ago and they’re already expanding like crazy.

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Someday I might get ambitious enough to start all my plants from seed. Or to take cuttings and keep them over winter, since several of these plants are actually tender perennials. But for now, having my annual birthday ritual of picking out flowers for the pots is working for me.

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

Summer Containers for the Front Garden via Cottage Magpie

They’re still very sparse, but I still kinda love them! And I love knowing that cheery billows of little flowers will be spilling over the edges of these containers all summer long.

Do you plant annuals at all?

Linking up to: An Oregon Cottage and Sew Much Ado.


Comments

12 responses to “Plants for Summer Containers”

  1. Just love your flowers. It makes it look like spring. In Florida where I live, we are getting ready for long hot summer. I like the containers also. It looks very nice and you should be so proud.

    1. Thank you so much, Mary! I bet it’s warm where you are! I’m in the Pacific Northwest, and it’s definitely Spring, but a cool and breezy one! Thanks for stopping by! ~Angela~

  2. Oh, I love them! And you made me smile with “accepting the reality of who we really are”. SO true! As for flowers, surprisingly enough, we have quite a few things that bloom all summer in Arizona! Who of thunk it?! Lantana’s are all over the place. We have yellow, purple, and a pinkish in the backyard and an awesome varigated in the front-it’s dark rosy pink on the outside of each flower, going to yellow-orange in the center! Fortunately, everything is low maintenence and all on drip systems (which were here when we bought it). But I’m still enjoying your daffodils on my computer!

    1. Low maintenance is the way to go! ๐Ÿ™‚ I don’t have a drip system, but I would love one someday. I bet it’s a necessity in Arizona! ~Angela~

  3. Accepting the reality of who I am meant emptying all the containers and storing them in the garage haha.

    1. Hahaha! Now *that* is knowing who you are! ๐Ÿ™‚ ~Angela~

  4. Barbara H. Avatar
    Barbara H.

    Enjoy the ritual of the spring container planting! It’s part of welcoming in this wonderful new season and saying goodbye to winter. I’m impressed that you have eight containers! They look lovely.

    1. Thank you, Barbara! I bought them all many years ago and I’ve just had them all this time. I’m glad I haven’t gotten rid of them! ~Angela~

  5. Gorgeous, Angela!! I love Spring and planting. I am anxious to get plants in pots, but here in Denver March and April are our heaviest/most snowfall so I must wait. Of course I could take pots in at night… I love your pots and your pictures. ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Leah, I’m with you, I wouldn’t take pots in at night! Too much work. Ha! Although I keep threatening to get a Meyer Lemon, so then I’ll have to during the spring and fall, right? Enjoy the snow while you have it! We almost never get any. ~Angela~

  6. I’m not good with containers either, but as every year, I’ll try something again! Maybe “million bells” as they look so cute in your containers.

    1. Magali, you really can’t go wrong with the Calibrachoa, it just blooms and blooms like crazy, and then at the end of the summer, you compost it. Easy peasy! ๐Ÿ™‚ ~Angela~

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