Feller Landscape Group

 

Serving the Chicagoland counties of DuPage, Kane and Northern Cook.  Over 25 years of experience!

 

 

 

The Feller Landscape Group

Our choice for the plant of the month...

...Where Imagination and Design Unite...

 

 

 

 

 

Lobelia

(Annual type)

 

 

Lobelia was introduced more than 200 years ago from the region around the Cape of Good Hope. The original wild forms of lobelia have been bred to bloom more profusely. There are trailing varieties and more compact bedding types which seldom exceeding 6 inches in height. The 1/2- to 3/4-inch-wide flowers borne along each stem, are blue on the common varieties.  White and carmine colors have also been developed.

Lobelia is prized for window boxes, hanging baskets, planters, and ground covers. Although the plants do best in full sun and moist, rich soil where summers are cool, they will grow surprisingly well in hot areas if given partial shade.

Lobelia is not sown directly in the garden because it will not not begin to flower until two months after the seed has germinated.  If you want to start the seeds indoors, plan on 10 to 12 weeks before the last frost.  Since the seeds are very small, plant them on top of finely prepared soil without covering them.  Most nurseries and garden supply stores offer started plants already in bloom. Transplant your Lobelia after all danger of frost is past, spacing them 4 to 6 inches apart. Remove flower spikes after blooming to produce further growth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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