Chrysanthemums need several months to develop a root structure to survive the winter. So if they are planted in the spring or early summer, they will survive. Those planted in fall will not survive the winter.
'Florist' (or 'exhibition') chrysanthemums are specially bred for beauty, not hardiness. They can't take cold winters.Unless you live where it's warm all year, stick to the 'garden' (or 'hardy') chrysanthemums at your local garden store, where the stock is tailored to your local conditions.All Chyrsants are beautiful it depends on where you live how they survive.
Chrysanthemums planted in the fall often don't develop enough roots to come back the next year.
'Florist' chrysanthemums are specially bred for beauty, not hardiness. They can't take cold winters. Stick to the 'garden' (or 'hardy') chrysanthemums at your local garden store, where the stock is tailored to your local conditions.Some folks in West Texas say their weather varies from the low teens in winter to near one hundred degrees in the summer. They have chrysanthemum plants that they bought locally and planted outdoors three years ago and they keep coming back every year.
I think its 13.million
The chrysanthemums that people buy at the florists or grocery store in fall and put out for their color will die with the frost. If you want chrysanthemums to grow the next year, you have to buy them earlier in the year and pinch off the flowers until after July 4th. Those will grow the next year.
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 need to pinch your chrysanthemums back before July 4 to make them bushy.
Chrysanthemums will live outdoors in your garden, provided: -you live where it's warm all year, OR -you stick to 'garden' (or 'hardy') chrysanthemums that you buy at your local garden store. Their stock is tailored to your local conditions. The 'florist' (or 'exhibition') chrysanthemums are specially bred for beauty, not hardiness. They need special care, such as staking, and can't take cold winters. Some folks in West Texas say their weather varies from the low teens in winter to near one hundred degrees in the summer. They have chrysanthemum plants that they bought locally and planted outdoors three years ago and they keep coming back every year.
The huckleberry is an tender perennial evergreen shrub that will come back every year in the southern zones. This is not the same plant known as the garden huckleberry, which is an annual and will not come back every year.
The book was entirely published in 1911. madnerd xD
Exact number of garden flags sold annually in the US is not readily available but it's estimated that thousands to millions are sold each year, depending on the market demand and trends.
1.2 million each year