Celebrate
2018 with Four Garden Honorees
By Melinda Myers
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[June 21, 2018]
It’s
a year-long celebration of flavor and beauty as we honor and grow
the beet, coreopsis, calibrachoa and tulip. The National Garden
Bureau (NGB) has declared 2018 the year of these garden mainstays.
This non-profit’s goal is to inspire you to grow these and more
plants in your gardens at home and work.
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The celebration starts with the tulip, a symbol of
spring. They come in a variety of flower types and colors. Select
from early bloomers like Apricot beauty and end spring with a late
blooming double tulip like Backpacker. Then add some pizzazz with
more double blooms, ruffled petals of parrot, pointed flowers of
lily types or fringed tulips.
Add more low maintenance beauty to your garden with the other two
National Garden Bureau “Year of Flower” designees. 2018 honors the
annual calibrachoa and perennial coreopsis.
Once you grow calibrachoas you’ll know why it has become a
gardener’s favorite. You’ll appreciate the wide selection of colors
and outstanding performance in containers. You may know these
beauties by their collection or series names such as Superbells®,
Million Bells®, Callie®, and Calipetite®. Fill a basket with these
beauties or mix them with other flowers, vegetables and herbs. Dress
up a pot of elephant ears or base of trees with calibrachoas,
cascading over the edge of the pot. The only challenge you’ll have
is deciding which one of these colorful plants to grow.
Grow a bit of sunshine in your garden with coreopsis. No matter
where you garden or your gardening style you can find a coreopsis
that fits the situation. Enjoy the long blooming, small yellow
daisy-like blooms and fine foliage of threadleaf coreopsis
(Coreopsis verticillata). Include these versatile plants in natural,
informal and even formal garden settings and containers. The
towering tall coreopsis (Coreopsis tripteris) brightens the back of
the flower border with its yellow daisy like flowers from mid summer
into fall.
Try a few of the newer coreopsis introductions with larger blooms
and different colors. Big Bang Cosmic Eye has bright yellow flowers
with dark red center, while Coreopsis ‘Ruby Frost of the Jewel
Series has ruby-red flowers with a fringe of frosty white.
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Dress up your dinner table with the NGB’s edible of
the year, beets. Not only are they tasty and pretty, but they’re
also good for you. These small vegetables are high in fiber,
vitamins A and C, have more iron than most vegetables and are rich
in antioxidants, calcium, potassium, phosphorus and folic acid.
Use beet greens in salads and roast, cook or juice
the colorful roots. Change things up with yellow and gold beets like
Touchstone Gold. It’s vibrant orange-red exterior and golden center
will add something special to any dish.
Entice those reluctant to eat beets to the table with All-America
Selections winner, Avalanche. The snow-white root has all the sweet
flavor of the beet without any bitterness or earthy flavor that may
have discouraged them in the past.
Then visit the NGB’s website (ngb.org) for creative and tasty ideas
for adding beets to your meals. Chef Jonathan Bardzik shares fun and
easy recipes and a video to help you brighten your meals with beets.
Join the fun and add these 2018 National Garden Bureau designees to
your containers and gardens. Then share the beauty and flavor with
friends and family throughout the growing season.
[Photo credit: National Garden Bureau]
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books,
including Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to
Grow Anything” gardening DVD series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio segments. Myers is a columnist
and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was
commissioned by NGB for her expertise to write this article. Myers’
web site is www.melindamyers.com.
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