What Are the Must Have Easy Plants for Garden

A English late Summer garden Herbaceous flower border with Rudbeckias and Michaelmas daisies

Jacky Parker Photography

When you're planning a garden, there are a lot of factors to consider. What's your soil like? How does it drain? What kind of sun—like how many hours?—does your garden get? That will affect whether you need full-sun perennials or shade perennials. Do you want to attract pollinators? Then you should consider planting some flowers that attract bees as well as some flowers that attract butterflies. You should also try to add lots of variety to a garden to keep it interesting—mixing in plants and flowers in number of different heights, colors, and textures.

And then there's the little matter of money. Sure, it's great to experiment, but for the most part, you want to plant things that have a good chance of thriving. It helps to know where your location falls on the USDA Hardiness scale and always read plant labels so you have an idea as to what the ideal conditions are for each and every plant. "A bargain doesn't need lots of attention, isn't prone to disease or insect problems, and spreads on its own," says Lexington, Kentucky-based landscape designer Jon Carloftis. And while there's no question that annual flowers deliver the most bang for the buck in a single season, perennials, shrubs, and trees provide long-lasting structure and color to the landscape.

Flower, Flowering plant, Plant, Cow parsley, Evergreen candytuft, Anthriscus, Caraway, Parsley family, Candytuft, Heracleum (plant),

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Annuals: Queen Anne's Lace

Genus: Daucus carota 'Queen Anne's Lace,' 'Wild Carrot'

Zones: 1 to 10

Cost: From $3

Expert Says: "This is one of the most useful and productive filler pants that you can grow from seed. I plant hundreds of them every year." —Erin Benzakein, author of Floret Farm's Cut Flower Garden

Flower, Flowering plant, Petal, Plant, Pink, common peony, Rosa × centifolia, Peony, Magenta, Chinese peony,

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Perennials: Peonies

Genus: Paeonia

Zones: 3 to 8

Cost: From $5

Expert Says: "In addition to being hugely popular, peonies are very easy to grow. Plants are easy to obtain, thrive in nearly every climate, and can live for over 100 years if cared for properly." —Erin Benzakein, author of Floret Farm's Cut Flower Garden

lavender

Gap Photos/Carole Drake

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Perennials: Lavender

Genus: Lavandula spp.

Zones: 5 to 9

Cost: $6 to $10

Expert Says: "Lavender's practically indestructible, genuinely deer-resistant, and comes in beautiful hues." —Robert Kourik, garden designer, Sebastopol, California

snapdragon

Gap Photos/Visions

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Annuals: Snapdragon

Genus: Antirrhinum majus 'Snap Daddy'

Zones: All Zones

Cost: $6

Expert says: "This long-blooming snapdragon has bright flowers and variegated foliage—and flourishes in cool and hot temperatures." —Dennis Schrader, nursery owner, Mattituck, New York

cleome

Roy and Dolores Kelley Photographs

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Annuals: Cleome

Genus: C. hassleriana 'White Queen'

Zones: All Zones

Cost: $1 to $4

Expert says: "To make a big splash in a sunny area, plant cleome. From late June to frost, you'll have four- to five-inch spiderlike blooms." —Jon Carloftis, landscape designer, Lexington, Kentucky

caladium

Derek St Romaine

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Annuals: Caladium

Genus: C. varieties

Zones: All Zones

Cost: From $8

Expert says: "Caladium brings color to a shady garden in the heat of summer. And some newer varieties can even take a little more sun." —John Dromgoole, nursery owner, Austin

black eyed susan

Janzig Flora/Alamy

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Perennials: Black-Eyed Susan

Genus: Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii

Zones: 3 to 9

Cost: From $8

Expert says: "The showiest of my self-seeding perennials, these golden daisies bloom from mid-July through mid-September and beyond." —Patricia Hill, garden designer, Elgin, Illinois

maiden grass

Gap Photos/Adrian Bloom

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Perennials: Maiden Grass

Genus: Miscanthus sinensis 'Adagio'

Zones: 5 to 9

Cost: $9 to $12

Expert says: "This grass forms a light, airy four-foot-tall mound and grows really well in otherwise tough and dry sites." —David McMullin, garden designer, Atlanta

daylily

Gap Photos/Charles Hawes

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Perennials: Daylily

Genus: Hemerocallis varieties

Zones: 3 to 9

Cost: From $4

Expert says: "Daylilies are gorgeous and easy to divide. You can build a fine collection of colors and shapes by acquiring a few plants each year." —Barbara Damrosch, farmer and author, Harborside, Maine

yaupon holly

Ken Cheeks

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Shrubs: Yaupon Holly

Genus: Ilex vomitoria

Zones: 7 to 10

Cost: $12 to $30

Expert says: "This drought-tolerant Texas native can grow to 15 feet or taller. In winter, its attractive red berries feed birds." —John Dromgoole

spiraea

Andrew Lawson/The Garden Collection

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Shrubs: Spiraea

Genus: S. nipponica 'Snowmound'

Zones: 3 to 8

Cost: $7 to $40

Expert says: "The tiny cascading summer blossoms are spectacular. But the wild waterfall-like shape of the stems gives great 'fill' to landscapes year-round." —Rebecca Cole, garden designer, New York City

clethra

Saxon Holt/Photobotanic

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Shrubs: Clethra

Genus: C. alnifolia varieties

Zones: 3 to 9

Cost: $10 to $25

Expert says: "One plant will perfume a whole yard in August, so I have what my father jokingly called 'a plethora of clethora' next to the porch." —Barbara Damrosch

sourwood

Gap Photos/Fiona Lea

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Trees: Sourwood

Genus: Oxydendrum arboreum

Zones: 5 to 9

Cost: $15 to $75

Expert says: "The sourwood offers four seasons of interest: late-spring blooms, glossy summer foliage, amazing fall color, and winter seedpods." —Jon Carloftis

apple tree

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Trees: Apple

Genus: Malus domestica

Zones: 4 to 8

Cost: $10 to $20

Expert says: "Apple trees produce lovely, fragrant pink blooms followed by fruit. Plus, they can be trained on a wall, as espaliers, or bent over arches." —Judy Murphy, landscape architect, Lakeville, Connecticut

swamp white oak

Franklin E Dinsmore

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Trees: Swamp White Oak

Genus: Quercus bicolor

Zones: 3 to 8

Cost: $25

Expert says: "On a dollar-per-square-foot basis, oaks are an incredible bargain. They may grow 60 feet or more and live for 300 years." —Steve Castorani, nursery owner, Landenberg, Pennsylvania

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Source: https://www.countryliving.com/gardening/garden-ideas/g1654/best-plants-for-a-garden/

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