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Fall. If you plant a perennial in fall 2006 and the same plant in the spring 2007 - by summer 2007 the one planted in the fall will be larger and healthier than the one planted in the spring.

In the winter when the "top" of the plant is not growning the bottom/roots are growing so it's getting established even though you can not see it because the top looks dead or brown.

2006-06-30 18:32:25 · answer #1 · answered by Sarah L 2 · 1 0

Month of April in the colder regions. Start planning for next year. Warmer parts of Texas you can have great results with November plantings where a freeze is not likely. Texas must have four or five climatic zones.

2006-06-30 04:39:22 · answer #2 · answered by A Leighton 2 · 0 0

Horticulture could be generally a technology degree as against panorama shape could be greater a layout important perhaps with technology to a pair extent (my wager could be you're able to ought to have horticulture training with the intention to pick what flowers could strengthen terrific interior the area/section this is being designed).

2016-10-31 23:48:59 · answer #3 · answered by bulman 4 · 0 0

Fall. Give them a chance to get established before our searing Texas summer heat.

2006-06-30 04:27:47 · answer #4 · answered by LoneStar 6 · 0 0

perinials --any time you wish

2006-06-30 04:25:29 · answer #5 · answered by golferwhoworks 7 · 0 0

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