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No. No one plant will bloom year-round. If you have full sun, Scabiosa 'Butterfly Blue' will bloom longer than any other one flower. It can potentially bloom from March to November in your area. Make sure the area never gets shade because they can be prone to some powdery mildew fungus during humid weather. Filling in between them with pansies in October every year will give you blooms when the scabiosa are still green, but are not blooming December-February. A soft yellow pansy like "primrose" would be beautiful with the scabiosa. During the hot summer the pansies will die, so you will have to buy and replant more every Oct. The scabiosa is a perennial.

2007-02-17 07:34:10 · answer #1 · answered by Emmaean 5 · 0 0

In your place on the map you should have a multiple plants that would bloom year round. Try to look up some garden designs with multiple plants that will give you the most blooms through out the year. Try you local horticulture center or state dept. of agriculture under horticulture and ask for ideas. Their are so many blooming plants the choice is up to you. Good luck with your gardening .

2007-02-17 12:15:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no single plant blooms year round.
You can look for plants that have long blooming seasons and plant them together in an important spot and you will have continual color, but not all from the same plant.
Look at Hibiscus and Stella Doro lilies as plants which have a long blooming season.

2007-02-17 11:54:25 · answer #3 · answered by Clarkie 6 · 0 0

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