Nyboy
Garden Master
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2010
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Have you ever read about a perennial thats was so hardy it could live anywhere, anyone could grow it, and fail when you tried? Some of the most fail proof plants have died in my garden. Bee balm is one, gardeners warn it can be a bit invasive its grows so well. I have tried many times, once I had a small patch struggling, gave a small division to a friend . Mine gave up the fight, her division grew and flowered great.
Took three tries for Lily of the Valley. Now I can't get rid of them. Took three tries for LOV pink variety -- still none surviving.
Then came my Epiphany! Red's Rules for Gardening. Rule one:
a plant's chance for survival is directly related to its cost and the time invested by the gardener. The more expensive and the more attention the greater likelihood of plant failure. Rule two:
Give a growing condition even close to what a plant needs and the plant will do what is required for its survival.
Now I get the roots close to the soil, let the plant know it's "grow or survive", and expect the plant to do the rest. Seldom fails to produce thriving plants, seedlings, cuttings, grafts, whatever I try.