Can you plant flowers around mailbox?
The area around a mailbox post can be an excellent place to plant a mixture of flowers aimed at drawing butterflies and other pollinators. In general, native flowers tend to be the best at drawing butterflies, as are various daisy-like flowers, such as coneflower.
Can you plant around mailbox?
Annuals, perennials, tropicals and shrubbery are all candidates for mailbox plantings. You can mulch the planting bed, or create a more natural feel using stones and pebbles.
What can I plant around a light post?
Marigolds, blue lobelia, verbena, petunias, coleus, and dusty miller.
How do you hide a pole in your yard?
How to Hide an Electric Pole in a Backyard
- Use a twining vine such as clematis to hide the pole.
- Create a conifer garden in front of the electrical pole.
- Plant a cluster of birch trees to disguise electrical poles.
- Hemlocks are dense enough to make a good screen.
What kind of flowers to plant at a mailbox?
Some good choices include: Rugosa roses (shrub roses) Creeping juniper Blue Star juniper Potentilla Dwarf Korean Lilac Viburnum English yew
What flowers to plant in my flower bed?
Another hardy perennial flower to grow among the flower bed is lavender. This fragrant and long-lived flower produces beautiful foliage year after year. The compact form and purple flowers of lavender are ideal planted in rows along the bed. Lavender prefers well-drained, alkaline soils to flourish.
Which flower bulbs to plant in fall?
Spring-flowering bulbs such as crocuses, daffodils, tulips and alliums are planted in the fall. Bulbs that bloom from early summer to fall, such as dahlias, tuberous begonias and canna lilies are planted in spring. Fall-blooming crocuses and colchicums are planted in late summer.
Can you plant flowers?
Before planting flowers, prepare the garden bed with a spade, working in at least 1-inch of organic matter. The soil should be loosened to a depth of at least 12-inches for annuals and 18-inches for perennials. Smooth the soil with a ground rake. Plant the flowers at the same soil level as they were in the container.