If planted early enough in the season for the roots to grow, chrysanthemums are perennials.
Florist chrysanthemums are annuals. Chrysanthemums grown in the garden can be perennials if they are planted long enough to get their roots established before a hard freeze.
The chrysanthemums that florists use are annuals. However there are perennial chrysanthemums and as long as they are not planted too late in the year to develop a good root structure, they will survive the winter and bloom again.
You could transplant any time after there is no danger of frost.
If you plant them in the spring, they will be perennials and last for many years. If you plant them in the fall, they will provide color for that fall only.
No, chrysanthemums are not evergreens. They are typically classified as herbaceous perennials, meaning they die back to the ground in winter and regrow in spring. While their foliage may persist in mild climates, they do not retain their leaves year-round like evergreen plants.
No, but cutting them back produces plants that have more stems and thus more flowers. Cutting also produces shorter plants that may have a more attractive round shape.
If you deadhead chrysanthemums, they may produce more blossoms. They only bloom in fall. If they are put too close to light sources that are on all night long, the plant will become confused and not bloom.
chrysanthemums have yellow and red
Chrysanthemums do not have thorns.
Hops are perennials.
perennials
It is best to divide chrysanthemums in the spring.