Creative Homemaking . . . Dedicated to your homemaking needs
~   Vegetable gardening, growing flowers, herbs, landscaping, composting, and more   ~
CLEANING HOME DECORATING COOKING GARDENING HOLIDAYS ORGANIZE FRUGAL LIVING
Craft Supplies
Wooden Letters
GARDENING
Container Gardening
EZ Up Canopy
Flower Gardening
Tents
Gas Logs
Herb Gardening
Lawn and Garden
Mosquito Magnet
Storage Sheds
Trees and Shrubs
Window Boxes
Home => Gardening => Flower Gardening => Best Drought Tolerant Garden Plants
Related Articles: Anyone can Grow Sunflowers! | Tips for Growing Beautiful Roses

Best Drought Tolerant Garden Plants
by Kathy Wilson

Description: If you are looking to use less water in your garden, here are some drought tolerant plants to consider.
Sponsors:

Most areas of the country are seeing a big change in the way we plant a garden. Water is becoming more and more a precious commodity and most gardeners are trying to find ways to plant a drought tolerant garden. Planting your garden with drought resistant plants doesn't have to be limited to flowers that look like bracken most of the year, or cacti and succulents that hardly speak to your need for a cottage garden. Many widely available plants are drought resistant or drought tolerant, and once established, need little or no supplemental water. As a bonus, many can be grown from seed for those of us who garden on a budget. Here are The Garden Glove's top picks for easy to grow from seed, drought tolerant plants.

Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia )
Yarrow (Achillea)
Perennial Sunflower (Heliopsis)
Poppies (Papaver)
Evening Primrose (Oenothera)
Fountain Grass (Pennisetum)
Mallow (Malva)
Purple Coneflower (Echinacea)
Globe Thistle (Echinops)
Tickseed (Coreopsis)
Blazing Star (Liatris)
Butterfly Bush (Buddleia)

Most of these varieties will bloom first year from seed if started indoors 4-6 weeks before the last hard frost. They will grow larger and fuller each year, and most can be divided in later years to provide free plants to expand your garden or trade with garden clubs and gardening neighbors. They all bloom over a long period, most of them the whole summer.

For an easy garden bed, choose your five favorites from this list, order seeds, start indoors and then transplant into your chosen garden bed. Plant each variety in groups of odd numbers, 5 or 7 is a good choice. Water during their first growing season to help them become well established, then watch them come back year after year better then ever.

Drought tolerant plants are beautiful, easy to grow and for any garden. No matter what the water situation is in your community, saving our natural resources is a no brainier with drought tolerant plants like these!

Want free gardening tips and ideas? Kathy Wilson is a home and garden writer, author and consultant and is the home decorating expert for LifetimeTV.com. Visit her for more home and garden ideas at http://www.TheGardenGlove.com and http://www.TheBudgetDecorator.com. Also visit her at http://www.Women-on-the-Net.com where any woman can learn to make money on the internet!


Comment on this article or submit your tip to CreativeHomemaking.com.
Click here for a printer friendly version of this page.
Receive new article links via the Web, SMS, or instant messages via Twitter!
Recommend this article to a friend!
Search our article archives.
Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
FamilyStickers.com offers one of the largest selections of family stickers, family car decals, and stick family stickers. These easy to apply vinyl window family car stickers are available in several themes and sizes or customized to your request.

Google
 





Reprint Articles | Privacy Policy | Submit Article | Advertise | Affiliate Program | Contact Us
Copyright 1998 - 2009, Creative Homemaking, LLC. Clipart from CountryClipArt.com.