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How do you start a flower garden from scratch? Start small with our expert flower design tips—plus advice for choosing, planting, and growing your flowers.
We all dream of a lush, lovely flower bed full of colorful blooms all season. What we end up with is usually a different story. Does your color run out when the heat hits? Do the plants clash and give the impression of clown pants? Do the tall plants crowd out the short ones? Is it all looking shabby by late summer?
Let’s review how to start your flower garden from scratch to understand the important considerations along the way.
Picking the Perfect Location for Your Flower Garden
Be sure to locate your flower garden where you can enjoy it every day. Take time to assess your site. Here’s a short list to go through:
How much sun does your garden get? Many people are surprised that they’ve made some wrong assumptions. Over a single typical day, write down the amount of sunlight your garden receives every hour from early in the morning to sunset. Is it full sun (6 hours or more), partial sun (3 to 6 hours), partial shade (about 3 hours), or full shade (less than 3 hours)? If you find your plant leaves burn or growth becomes leggy, those are hints that the plants are placed in the wrong location.
What is the soil like? You need healthy soil that’s not compacted and that drains well. A couple of clues: After it rains, the water shouldn’t pool in the garden area. Also, it shouldn’t be difficult to dig into the soil to amend it with organic matter, such as compost, to provide nutrients and improve soil structure. Learn how to garden in compacted clay soil.
Once you know what you are dealing with, you can select plants that will do well on your site. Think of your garden as a multi-layered community of plants. When you buy a plant, you’ll see that the tags will tell you how much sun exposure they need. Other things to consider about your gardening site include:
Does your hose reach that far? Having an accessible water source will be important, especially when the heat of mid-summer kicks in.
Also consider what function—other than looking gorgeous—you’d like it to perform. Would you like it to screen an ugly view, add privacy, or provide a place to sit? Do you want to see it from inside the house, make a welcoming front walkway, surround a deck or patio, or be a border garden on the edge of the lawn or an island of color in the middle?
How much work do you want to do, and how much time do you have to spend caring for your new garden? Be realistic. It is best to start small. You can always enlarge your garden over time.
Prep Work for Flower Garden
Before you start digging, make sure to check for buried utility lines by calling Dig-Safe at 811.
Lay out the location of your garden with a garden hose or rope. Make sure the curves aren’t too sharp so you can still mow around it easily. Once you get a shape you like, mark the outline with lime or powdered chalk. Use an edger or flat spade to cut along the edge.
There are many ways to attack your grass. You can dig it up by hand, till the grass in if it isn’t weedy, remove the sod completely, or smother it. Personally, I prefer smothering to digging. Using the lasagna method, cover the area with a thick layer of newspaper or cardboard, wet that down, and cover it with several layers of any organic mulch materials you can find, such as shredded leaves, coffee grounds, grass clippings, manure, compost, topsoil, rotten sawdust, and seed-free straw. It will take a while, but eventually, the grass will die off. You don’t have to wait, though—you can dig planting holes directly through the mulch into the ground and start planting as soon as you like.
Avoid digging or handling soil when it’s wet in order to prevent compaction. If you squeeze the soil into a ball and it doesn’t crumble or fall apart, it’s too wet to plant.
Choosing Flowers
This is the fun part! Use plants that you love, whether it’s the color, size, shape, or fragrance that attracts you. Group them by their sun and water requirements. Pay attention to foliage. It will persist long after perennial flowers have faded.
A combination of bulbs, perennials, annuals, and shrubs will offer four-season interest.
Plan for season-long color by mixing annuals with perennials.
What are perennial flowers? These flowers come back year after year and form the backbone of the garden. You only have to plant them once! By staggering the bloom times, you can have color all season long.
Once a perennial is done blossoming, it still needs to look good; plants with interesting foliage colors or textures will continue to add something to your garden even when not in bloom.
What are annual flowers? These are the one-year wonders which add quick blooms and instant pops of color. Annuals are also great for bridging the gaps in the perennial garden.
They will give you season-long color if kept deadheaded. Since they are not permanent additions to the garden, you can change them every year, giving your garden a new look.
Annual flower choices: I can’t live without these annuals: cleome, verbena bonariensis, browallia, impatiens, zinnia ‘Profusion’, dahlias, calendula, cosmos, and nasturtiums.
Don’t forget spring bulbs! In the fall, plant spring-blooming bulbs, which will kick things off in early spring. Snowdrops, tulips, daffodils, and crocus get the party started!
Shrubs also provide structure and four-season interest. In the frosty north, our gardens are covered by snow for months. Dwarf conifers, hedges, broadleaf evergreens, and shrubs with colorful bark or twisty shapes add winter interest.
Shrubs that also offer fruit and fall color are welcome additions, too.
Design a Living Tapestry: Flower Garden Essentials
Now, let’s think about what makes a good flower garden design.
Mixing heights, colors, and textures will give you a much more appealing landscape than regimented rows.
Make borders deep to hold more plants.
Repeating plants, shapes, and colors throughout the garden give it continuity. A general rule is to plant in groups of three.
Pay attention to heights. Even in a small garden, there is room for short, medium, and tall plants. However, you don’t have to stick strictly with tall plants in the back and short ones in the front. Let a few of the taller ones advance to the middle to vary the look.
When planning an island, remember to make it visible from all sides.
Leave enough room around your perennials for future growth. You can always plant annuals to fill up the extra space. They offer the chance to try out different color combinations, and if you don’t like the look, you can easily change it next year!
Flower Bed Design Ideas
Need inspiration? Check out these free flower bed designs designed by Almanac editors as well as readers:
If you plant it, they will come. Birds will visit fruiting trees and shrubs and dine on seeds and berries. Plan to have some evergreens that offer shelter and nesting sites.
When choosing plants, remember to “bee” kind to your native pollinators. Look for native perennials if you want to make your garden a bee-, butterfly-, and hummingbird-friendly habitat. Fancy hybrids look lovely, but many may no longer produce the amounts of pollen and nectar needed to sustain pollinators.
Also, go for native if you want low maintenance, hardiness, and fewer pest and disease problems. Once established, they will need less watering and pampering than exotic plants.
Plant in drifts or blocks so that bees can find your flowers. In searching for food, many kinds of bees collect from a single type of plant on each foray, like all daisies one time and all borage another time. Scientists call this “flower constancy.” To make foraging less work, plant masses of 5 to 7 plants of the same species together rather than scattering them around the garden singly. This also reduces the disorganized “clown pants” look.
Attention to maintenance will keep your garden looking fresh.
More Tips on Planting Your Flower Garden
As with vegetables, there’s a right and a wrong time to plant your favorite flowers. See our When to Plant Flowers chartwith information on when to start seeds and when to transplant young plants outdoors.
Which flowers did you choose? We’ve chosen the most popular beginner flowers and provided the essential information you need for choosing, planting, and maintaining them. See the Flower Guide Library and click on the flower image to view each guide.
When planting, don’t crowd the plants. Your seed packet will advise on spacing. Even though it may look sparse at first, leave enough space for them to fill out naturally.
As mentioned in the planning notes above, plant in drifts or blocks of flower types or in groups of three for shrubs.
Water newly planted flowers and shrubs as needed until they become established. If you are not getting at least an inch of rain per week, you will need to water regularly.
Is it possible to purchase the set of books that are in your give-away? I have an old home and many of my shrubs and plants were recently killed with a 10-day unprecidented freeze!
Zone 8. I am recently retired and don't know where to start!
Hi Robin, I love you articles and read them always. Although I have had flower gardens for 50 plus years, I always believe I can learn something new everyday. I've been doing lasagna gardening for about 20 years now with great success and use it especially for new plots. I'm a bit of a migrant and have to keep starting over! Hooray for lasagna gardening and no till.