Garden Gate

Grow Gorgeous Peonies

Can such beautiful flowers also be easy to grow? The answer is a definite yes! Peonies are not only easy-care, but they make great cut flowers, are often fragrant and can live for generations. Even though some gardeners grow huge, colorful peonies with no effort, sometimes you run into challenges. So I checked in with four expert peony growers with decades of experience and loads of advice to share with you.

CHOOSE YOUR PEONY Let’s start with a few shopping tips. You can buy a herbaceous peony two ways: Already growing in pots or bare root. It’s true that buying potted plants is more convenient, but if you really want to take advantage of the huge range of colors, flowers shapes, bloom times and plant sizes, such as ‘Coral Charm’ and ‘Candy Heart’ at right, ordering bare-root peonies from a mail-order nursery is the way to go. It will take some time for your plant to reach full size—usually 3 years—but getting just the right plant for your garden might be worth the wait.

LOOK FOR EYES When your bare-root peony arrives it should be a firm, tuberous root with three to five eyes—those little pink buds in the photo at left are what you’re looking for.

If you don’t see any eyes or find that the roots are mushy

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Garden Gate

Garden Gate1 min read
Weed Watch
What it looks like Imported to North America in the late 1800s, this woody shrub was originally intended as a rootstock for slow-rooting ornamental roses. But it quickly escaped cultivation. Plants produce clusters of small, fragrant pale pink to whi
Garden Gate3 min read
Small Backyard Makeover
Mary Ann Fordyce’s small Seattle garden had a big problem—a newly built three-story condo looming over the backyard. The spots where she used to relax with a book and gather with friends were now on full display, with nothing to block the view from u
Garden Gate2 min read
New & Improved Lawn Mower
Over the first two and a half decades that we were homeowners, my husband and I only owned two lawn mowers. Both were hand-me-downs. At our first home, we inherited an old lawn mower from neighbors who had just purchased a new one. While it technical

Related Books & Audiobooks