KWGN
  • Home
    • The CW
    • This TV
    • Live
    • Gas Prices
    • Colorado's Best Deals
    • Ask the Expert
    • Contests
    • Traffic
    • Jobs
    • About KWGN | Contact Us | Advertise
  • News
    • Colorado News
    • National & World News
    • Colorado Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Your Money
    • Photo Galleries
  • Weather
    • Weather Home
    • iMap Radar
    • Futurecast
    • Watches & Warnings
    • Sign Up for Email Alerts
    • Closings
    • Storm Tracker
    • Fraser's Favorites
  • Daybreak
    • Contests
    • Dessert Diva
    • Horoscope
  • Colorado's Best
    •  
  • Deals
    •  
  • Jobs
    •  
  • Video
    •  
  • Gardening
    •  
  • TV Schedule
    • 90210
    • ANTM
    • Gossip Girl
    • Hellcats
    • Life UneXpected
    • Moonlight
    • Nikita
    • One Tree Hill
    • Smallville
    • Supernatural
    • The Vampire Diaries
  • Facebook
    •  
  • TRENDING
  • Hammer Attack
  • Dogs in Snow
  • Mug Shots
Advanced Search

Advanced Search

X

Easy garden plants

New gardeners itching to get their hands in the soil can benefit from plants that are good-looking, low maintenance and worthy of a place in their own parcel of paradise. Here's a smattering of different types of plants recommended by local experts. Get the full story: Beginner's pluck — Nina A. Koziol, Special to Tribune Newspapers
Image 1 of 6
  • «2
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • »
"Beginning gardeners may not be familiar with the light levels or soil conditions of their garden plots," says residential landscape designer Kim Kaulas, of Chicago (kimkaulas.com). To meet that challenge, her vote goes to the wax begonia, with its glossy, succulent leaves in green, bronze or red, and its tidy mound of flowers.<br>
<br>
"They take a wide range of light levels and can handle wet-to-dry conditions," she says. The plants are annuals: Plant them after all threat of frost has disappeared (in our growing Zone 5, this usually is mid- to late May, but if you're unsure, ask an expert at a garden center) and they will last until the first hard frost in autumn, typically sometime in October. Wax begonias are usually sold in "flats" of six or more plants. "They come in various flower and foliage color combinations, they'll take full sun or full shade, they're drought-tolerant and they don't require deadheading," Kaulas says.

Wax begonia (Begonia semperflorens)

( Ball Horticultural Co. photo / January 11, 2012 )
"Beginning gardeners may not be familiar with the light levels or soil conditions of their garden plots," says residential landscape designer Kim Kaulas, of Chicago (kimkaulas.com). To meet that challenge, her vote goes to the wax begonia, with its glossy, succulent leaves in green, bronze or red, and its tidy mound of flowers.

"They take a wide range of light levels and can handle wet-to-dry conditions," she says. The plants are annuals: Plant them after all threat of frost has disappeared (in our growing Zone 5, this usually is mid- to late May, but if you're unsure, ask an expert at a garden center) and they will last until the first hard frost in autumn, typically sometime in October. Wax begonias are usually sold in "flats" of six or more plants. "They come in various flower and foliage color combinations, they'll take full sun or full shade, they're drought-tolerant and they don't require deadheading," Kaulas says.
  • E-mail
  • add to Twitter Twitter
  • add to Facebook Facebook
  • add to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  •  
 

Comments (0)

Add comments | Discussion FAQ

Currently there are no comments. Be the first to comment!

    • KWGN-TV 100 East Speer Blvd. Denver, Colorado 80203
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • About KWGN
    • EEO Report
A LocalTV, LLC website, powered by Tribune Digital