To ensure your annuals live to their full potential, as a
gardener, you must follow these basic steps.
- Plant your annuals as soon as spring has finally arrived for
good. Putting them in too early can
cause harm if they get too cold, and waiting too long may not give them enough
time to thrive.
- Annuals also do their best if they are planted in
well-drained, loose, loamy soil. If you
have sandy soil, you should add two or three inches of organic soil amendment,
which is compost, ground bark, or peat moss.
- You must water your annuals regularly. The soil can dry out in between watering, and
you do not want the soil to be excessively wet.
- Good gardeners also apply a monthly application of
fertilizer to their annuals. It can be
liquid or dry fertilizer.
- To ensure that flowers continue to bloom all summer, you need to remove all of the dead flowers with shears or by pinching. This will help your plant to produce as many flowers as it can.

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