20+ Pretty Pink Winter Tree Decorating Ideas That Looks So Awesome

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This discussion includes not only winter flowers, but shrubs, evergreens, ornamental grass, and trees you might use to make your winter festive and colorful. Don’t forget to group your winter garden flower pots in the best possible site, and use garden planters suitable for winter gardening-not fragile terra cotta pots, in other words. Avoid placing pots on concrete (it gets too cold) and group plants together in a site shielded from wind.

Asters (fall blooming, and in some conditions these can also produce early winter flowers)Chrysanthemums (late fall into early winter bloom time)Ornamental kales (not a flower, but very interesting for fall, shading from greens to reds)Pansies (can flower in winter in some zones)Sedums (‘Autumn Joy’ blooms red in fall and can go through early winter in some zones)Winter-flowering violasSpring Bulbs. You can also underplant your winter container garden with bulbs such as snowdrops, crocus, tulips, and narcissus.

Shore Juniper (Juniperus conferta). This juniper is low-spreading and hardy from zones 6-10. Japanese Garden Juniper (Also a spreader, growing to 18 inches and hardy from zones 4-10).Always a great choice. You can allow boxwood to grow naturally into its mounding shape, or clip it for a great-looking topiary. And remember, boxwood also looks stunning along a patio, deck, or front yard entrance when planted in identical pots.The following list contains conifers perfectly suited to winter container gardening.

These occur in a wide array of colors including silvery blue, yellow, lime-green, and deep green. These lovely dwarf conifers will illustrate just how easily you can achieve stunning color and visual interest–and without using even one winter flower. The variations in color tone combined with leaf texture and form will make great additions to your container plantings.