Gardeners of Nostr, I need your advice! In our first few years on our land I focused my planting energy on trees and shrubs, but now I finally have some perennial flowers going (yay!! very happy about that ๐Ÿ˜Š). The purple agastaches in the foreground have been blooming all summer and are always full of butterflies and bees. Here's the question: how do I handle winter for the perennial flowers? With trees and shrubs, I obviously know where they are even in winter and can mulch around the trunk and keep weeds at bay in early spring -but since these flowers will die back to the ground in the winter, I'm not quite sure how folks keep track of where they are and handle winter prep. Should I mulch around where they are now? or mark the spots with flags? or just cover everything and hope that they poke through the mulch in the spring? image #asknostr #gardening #perennials #homesteading #flowers

Replies (8)

Yes, mulch generously around their bases. You can prune woody growth back in the spring, or if they die fully back to the roots they should be able to pop through. Do you get a lot of snow where you are?
not much snow. A few times/winter but it rarely hangs around for more than a day or two. Pretty wide temperature variations in the winter (0- 60F). Thank you! Will mulch generously around their bases. This is the first year of the agastache, so I'm not sure if anything will hang around into spring (if so that will help!). ๐Ÿ™
Mitnev's avatar
Mitnev 3 months ago
The semi-woody steams will be enough marker to find them in spring.
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