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African daisies (Giant) (Osteospermum group)


This seed pack had flowers that produced in several shades of yellow, orange, and apricot. No white flowers sprouted. They open in daylight and close at night. The seed pack said they are annuals but they have come back every year for the last 3 years and I saw some varieties that show them as perennials, either way, they are really pretty.

 I'm not sure if they will come back this year because we had extended cold weather. I bought more seeds just in case. They grew straight up to about 6+ feet and also grew long enough to use on a trellis. African Daisy can also be cut and used in flower arrangements or dried.

If you can't find them in the nurseries you can grow them from seed. They are pretty easy to grow. Just sprinkle them on top of some garden soil, cover very lightly, and voila in one to two weeks you should have seedling. Make sure when they reach about 2 to 3 inches tall thin them to about 18 inches apart. 

The two plants below were growing in the same section of my garden and at first, I thought they were sunflowers but my package said, African Daisy. They are still a part of the Sunflower family.


African Daisy
I used a focus mode on the camera to blur the background for this sideways close-up.





 

Established Garden Plants



 Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words is very true when it comes to picking flowers for the garden. I have seen plants in the store or greenhouse and said meh..not for me, only to later see the same plant matured and in the garden and go wow that is beautiful.


Plants that are matured and establish look different than those plants in the two and three-quart containers. It is best to get a view of how big your plant will get and how it looks when matured.

"God Almighty first planted a garden. And indeed, it is the purest of human pleasures". ~Frances Bacon

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