Winter Gardens:
Winter Window Box
Colorful Conifers for Your Winter Garden
Winter White
Pansy Pick-me-up Tricks for Winter
 



My Home Ideas

Quick Guide to Winter Garden Care
Eleven simple tasks to keep your lawn and garden flourishing into winter


 
Winter White Blooms
Their brightness will energize your home and garden.
By Ellen Ruoff Riley / Photography Joseph De Sciose / Styling Buffy Hargett
   
  Primroses
   
  Pansies and Violas
   
  Candytufts
WEB EXCLUSIVE:
Click to see a slide show of Ellen's Picks: White Flowers for Every Season

Winter's garden feigns quiet slumber. In reality, though, it's catapulting the New Year into four seasons of floral profusion. As the first petals face the world, the landscape begins its progression of nonstop color.

The Southern spirit of each season can be captured in a dominant shade. Right this minute, white flowers abound. In spring, the world erupts with a flurry of pink. Summer's cool blues offer a reprieve from heat, and the first hint of gold promises autumn's onset. Now and in the coming months, we will celebrate each one in its time, explaining how you can keep your world blooming throughout the year.

Primroses
Creamy vanilla primroses bundle uncomplicated charm and innocence in the petals of a flower. The Upper South enjoys these happy plants as perennials under trees and shrubs. The rest of us appreciate them as seasonal potted plants.

Primroses prefer cool weather and damp soil. If you choose to keep them indoors, find a chilly windowsill, and water the soil as it begins to dry. Outdoors, they snuggle into containers and thrive, provided they don't suffer a hard freeze. Again, moisture is key. For the longest bloom time, peek down between the petals in search of buds when buying plants; you'll be rewarded with several months of easy-care flowers.

Pansies and Violas
Facing winter without flinching, these flowers are tenacious against cold, undemanding, and endlessly cheerful with snowy white blooms. New crops appear in stores for immediate planting and last willingly through spring's unpredictable behavior. To really appreciate your flowers, fill containers, and keep them close to entries and paths you pass by frequently. Pick them in copious amounts for indoor bouquets; this encourages new buds.

Candytufts
These flowers drift across the landscape in clouds of whiteness. Plant them on the edge of a walkway, or let them tumble over a wall. Their drought-tough nature makes them the perfect choice for a chronically dry spot.




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