Description
BUY ONE SOUTHERN SHRUB, GET ONE 50% OFF WITH CODE SOUTHERNBOGO.
Plant spacing is based on the ultimate width of the plants. This figure is normally given as a range; for example, 3-5’. If you live in a cold climate and/or want plants to fill in more quickly, plan to space at the shorter end of the range. If you live in a warm climate, are on a limited budget, or are willing to wait longer for plants to touch, use the higher end of the range. Using the larger number is recommended when calculating distance from a building or structure. There’s really no such thing as "maximum spacing": if you don’t want your plants to touch, you can space them as far apart as you’d like. All plant spacing is calculated on center, or in other words, the centers of the plants are spaced one half of their eventual width apart:
Unless you are planting in a straight line, as you might for hedges or edging, space your plants in a staggered or zig-zag pattern for a more interesting and naturalistic look:
Hand-picked at our greenhouse
Shipped to your door
Arrives as young plant
Do you dream of a flower-filled landscape or garden with never-ending beauty? We do, too: that’s why we’ve compiled a list of our favorite long-blooming shrubs! Start your planting with these ten flowering shrubs that provide months instead of weeks of colorful blooms.
Received plant and planted as directed. It died!
Thank you for your feedback! It’s surprisingly normal for newly transplanted plants to appear like they aren’t growing. That’s because most of the growth occurs below ground in their first year as they allocate more energy to root development. Once your plant is established, it will start investing more in shoot and flower development. To learn more about how plants “sleep, creep, and leap”, read our FAQ here: https://bit.ly/FAQ-plant-growth
My Mundo are blooming right now, after they were planted this past spring. WOW- and their colors are bright and flowers full
The plants are doing very well. I am thinking of getted 2 more.
This review is not for the Azelia order, it is for the order from August 13, 2021
Moved into new home and ordered 18 plants close to $200 Middle of August 2021 and it is not the first time I ordered from Great Gadens. By the time I received the shipment and planted early September 2021could not tell the progress of the plants being in zone 6 and close to cold season. Now that winter is behind us I found out that 2 of the 18 plants did not survive the winter. Called in to customer service last week and was told I missed the warranty period by a week ???? thus I am out of warranty. I was so disappointed not because of the $$ lost rather by the attitude and poor customer service not understanding September in zone 6 is fall and plants stop growing thus can not tell if the plants received are healthy or not.
Hi Sahran, I'm sorry to hear some of your plants didn't survive the winter! We are also located in zone 6, so we understand the struggles of a cold winter and slow growth. It looks like your order was placed on 8/13 and was delivered by FedEx on 8/18, so unfortunately your order does not fall under our fall guarantee! It looks like our customer service team did offer you a generous discount code for a new order. We're sorry for the inconvenience and hope you enjoy the rest of your plants. Please contact our customer service team via email if you have any other questions. https://www.greatgardenplants.com/pages/our-guarantee
I had high hopes for this plant. It didn’t survive the winter in zone 8 :(.
Sorry to hear about your Azalea. I see you received your order last fall, so it is still covered under warranty. Please send pictures to claims@greatgardenplants.com along with your order # and we will gladly send a replacement.
We will notify you on events like Low stock, Restock, Price drop or general reminders so that you don’t miss the deal