Front Yard Garden

These are the Longest Blooming Perennials in my Garden (I Tracked Them All Year)



👉️ Free Bloom Chart: https://www.prettypurpledoor.com/guides/free-bloom-charts/
👉️ Article: https://www.prettypurpledoor.com/long-blooming-perennials/

I tracked the bloom times of the flowers in my garden for an entire year to come up with this list of very long blooming perennials. I can’t wait to reveal the results.

Please note I may earn commissions if you shop through links in this description.

Longest Blooming Perennials in My Garden (+ Links to Purchase)
Butterfly Weed (11 weeks): https://shrsl.com/21uh1
Catmint ‘Walkers Low’ (8 weeks*): https://shrsl.com/1r0tx
Purple Coneflower (10 weeks): https://shrsl.com/1iqez
Coreopsis ‘Early Sunrise’ (12+ weeks): https://shrsl.com/k7oy-3nq-emu6zk_1-1
Crape Myrtle ‘Black Diamond Pure White’ (11 weeks): https://shrsl.com/1oq8c
Daylily ‘Fragrant Returns’ (12 weeks*): https://shrsl.com/1j34z
Joe Pye Weed ‘Baby Joe’ (7.5 weeks): https://shrsl.com/39t6a
Rose of Sharon ‘Azurri Blue Satin’ (11 weeks): http://shrsl.com/3ndlc
Siberian Bugloss ‘Silver Heart’ (7 weeks): https://www.brecks.com/product/silver-heart-siberian-bugloss
Spanish Bluebells (8 weeks): https://www.brecks.com/product/spanish-bluebells
Spiderwort (8 weeks*): https://shrsl.com/39t6l
Veronica ‘Pink Potion’ (12+ weeks): https://shrsl.com/39t6i
Yarrow ‘Apricot Delight’ (8 weeks): http://shrsl.com/39t6d
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🌷Helping you create a vibrant, manageable 4-season landscape that is uniquely you.🌷

I’m Amy and I help home gardeners design design landscapes that are uniquely you.

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I track the bloom times of all of the flowers in my garden for an entire year to create the ultimate list of long spooming perennials in my own yard the results were actually quite surprising to me my name is Amy and over at pretty purple door.com I help home gardeners

Design Four Season Landscapes that are uniquely you so in this list I have a lot of awesome long blooming perennials many of these are native to the US or cultivars of native plants which are often referred to as native hours all the photos you’ll see in this video are

From my own garden unless otherwise noted so let’s get right into it first up is butterflyweed this grows in zones four through nine in full to part sun this is a native milkweed that’s one of the few host plants for the monarch butterfly it’s found in the wild from

Maine to South Dakota to Desert Southwest to Florida butterfly weed grows orange clusters of flowers from June through August and in the fall the upright seed pods crack open and the seeds spread with shiny hairs in the wind and butterfly weed bloomed for 11 weeks in my garden next up is catmint

Walker’s Low the Scrolls in zones four through nine and fold apart sun it’s a mountain perennial with spicy fragrant leaves that makes a great border plant it shows off small lavender bluish flowers for eight weeks from late spring through fall this is one of my favorite

Plants in my garden it smells great it’s always beautiful and like I said it bloomed for eight weeks with multiple reblooms in my garden next is purple coneflower this grows in zones three through eight in full depart sun it’s a perennial that’s native to most prairies and Meadows and open Woods of the

Central to Southeastern us purple coneflowers are a must for any cottage style Garden I think they stand pretty tall at about four feet high and the flowers have pinkish purple petals that surround a large brown protruding Center the blooms last from mid to late summer through most of the fall this bloomed

For 10 weeks in my garden next is coreopsis and the variety that I have is called Early Sunrise rise this grows in zones three through nine in full to part sun it grows naturally in dry and Rocky soils throughout North America Early Sunrise is a native cultivar of

Coreopsis which is native to central in eastern North America the skinny stems are about a foot high and are top with bright yellow a very sunny sunshiny flowers that can bloom for more than 12 weeks from Summer through fall this bloomed for over 12 weeks in my garden I

Just love it it’s very very happy flower and it’s just constantly blooming next up is crepe myrtle Black Diamond Pure White I’m saying here zones six through nine but we had actually a cold Frost that almost nearly killed this in zone six so I think zone six is a little

Pushing it maybe zone seven through nine this grows in full sun and it bloomed for 11 weeks in my garden this one’s technically a tree or a very large shrub but the white ruffled flowers against this dark maroon foliage it makes it really a beautiful contrast that can’t

Be ignored there’s also the ones that are black diamond pure red I believe it’s called and black diamond pure pink or something like that so you can get the flower Blooms of different colors and this bloomed for 11 weeks from Summer through fall in my garden but

Like I said it got nipped with some Frost so I’m not sure about its hardiness in zone six at this point next up is Daylily fragrant returns this grows in zones five through nine in full sun to Parts on it blooms from early to late summer these are bright yellow

Lilies with green sword-like foliage it’s almost like a grassy texture and they prefer full sun and moist well-drained soil and they don’t really care for a ton of fertilizer or anything like that they grow in kind of crappy conditions if you will they bloom all summer long with very little care they

Kind of deadhead themselves and everything and this bloomed for over 12 weeks in my garden so very easy to care for plant very beautiful has beautiful foliage and also blooms for a really long time next up is Joe pie weed and the variety that I have is called Baby

Go this grows in zones two through nine so it’s a very very cold hearty and it grows in full sun to Parts on a baby Joe is a native cultivar of Joe pie weed which is native to Eastern and Central North America it’s a great choice as a

Late season statement for your garden since it blooms late summer through fall it has four foot long stems and this is just the baby Joe has four foot long stems so the actual native Joe pie weed will actually be much taller than this and green lance-shaped foliage and the

Flowers at the top are made of little florets and brats in a dusty rose color it’s sort of like if you’re familiar with Autumn Joy Sedum this reminds me of autumn Joyce Sedum on a much larger scale that’s sort of the look of this plant without the succulent leaves this

Bloomed for almost eight weeks in my garden it’s just very beautiful it gets so tall and it creates kind of like a cozy Hideaway for places so if you have a space like I have a circular brick patio in my back and I have this Joe pie

Weed kind of in front of that circular patio so it sort of secludes that area a lot more I like how the height does that for you and it’s beautiful to look at next up is Rose of Sharon the variety that I have is called Azuri blue satin

Rose of Sharon’s grow zones five through nine in full sun and this is a large and Hearty shrub that produces big bright purplish blue flowers so the flower color is very different this particular Rose of Sharon it’s almost a blue I have another one called blue chiffon that’s a

Little bit lighter color than this Azure blue but it is a true blue as well it’s almost like a Periwinkle blue the flowers of the Azuri blue have these gorgeous wine red streaks in the veins of the petal and these Bloom for 11 weeks in my garden from mid-summer to

Fall I just want to point out too that Rose of Sharon can be an evasive species in a lot of places this is actually a sterile cultivar so if you love Rose of Sharon but you don’t want to plant something that’s invasive you may want to to look at one of these sterile

Varieties like Azure blue satin or blue chiffon or I think there’s also a pink Chiffon that you can look at next up is Siberian bew gloss silver heart this grows in zones three through eight and part sun to shade so this is a good shade one it blooms in the spring and

It’s a herbaceous perennial with beautiful year-round foliage if you’re a hostile lover you’re gonna love this plant too it has white and light green heart-shaped leaves and in the spring it grows small delicate blue flowers and they sort of just kind of float and dance over top of the flower similar to

Like what a hosta or a cute girl would do and they’re just the truest most beautiful blue and they last a long time in my garden the blooms of Siberian View Glass lasted over seven weeks next up is Spanish bluebells these grown zones three through eight and part sun to

Shade and this one is a bulb with foliage similar to that of a daffodil but they’re topped with purplish bell-shaped flowers They’re hearty and Darius a student will Bloom for eight weeks in the spring for you so I really like this foliage the foliage also kind

Of reminds me a little bit of the Daylily that we talked about earlier but a very beautiful flower and I love that it takes that part sun to shade as well next is spiderwort this grows in zones four through nine and full sun through shade very tolerant of a lot of

Different conditions spiderwort is native from Southern Canada to South America including the United States its flowers come anywhere from a bluish purple to white with sort of a purple Center and have an interesting cycle they last one day every Bloom opens in the morning it closes by midday and then

It will Wilt and turn into a jelly-like fluid in my garden spiderwort bloomed continuously for eight weeks and then it re-bloomed throughout the fall when I didn’t even expect it a lot of people will say that spiderwort is invasive it is not invasive just gonna fix that term

For you a little bit invasive means that it’s not native and it’s taking over native habitat so never call spiderwort invasive it’s just an aggressive spreader it spreads by undergrown rhizomes so it’ll fill in a patch or an area I find that it doesn’t spread as quickly or as aggressively in the shade

The plants that I have in the shade they fill in a little bit more each year they grow they’re great to divide they’re great to share with friends I really love this plant especially if you have a larger space to kind of fill with a ground cover of some kind next is

Veronica pink potion this grows in zones four through eight in full to part sun and Veronica is also known as Spike Speedwell this Mount forming perennial adds vertical interest to your garden with baby pink flower wands that bloomed for over 12 weeks in my garden from late

Spring into October so this is a really cool plant it reminds me of a Salvia but it has a bit later of a bloom time so if you do have salvias in your garden this Veronica pink potion can kind of extend the blooms times of some other flowers

In your garden that you may love like salvia next is yarrow apricot Delight this grows in zones four through nine and full sun it blooms early to late summer it bloomed for eight weeks in my garden apricot Delights a cultivar of yarrow which grows naturally in the United States this plant bloomed with

Clusters of Dusty Rose almost an apricot colored flower with really unique color to the flower and it blooms through summer and also produced multiple reblooms throughout the year once the flowers faded the seed heads were also really attractive in the garden so I left them going but again this one

Bloomed for eight straight weeks in my garden and then continued to re-bloom throughout the season so you may be wondering how I actually tracked the bloom times of these perennials in my garden and a long time ago over at papergardworkshop.com I downloaded a bloom chart and I was able to fill in

All the plants and then kind of measure when they started when they ended and then I just kind of tallied the results at the end I did check on the website and I didn’t see it there anymore so I did create a bloom chart for you if you

Want to kind of go go through this process and you mark down all your plants and then you can tell how long each one bloomed in a particular season I’ll leave a link to that bloom chart in the description below so you can grab that just a note that these plants may

Not bloom for the same length of time where you live is where I live and I’m in Northeast Pennsylvania they may not even perform the same way for me next year and that’s just the joy and the pain of gardening a lot can depend on your conditions where you live along

With the climate in any given year regardless of this disclaimer I still believe that these are all excellent long blooming plants that you should consider adding to your garden so here are some of the takeaways that I’ve had while doing this process over half of the plants on this long Bloomer list are

Natives or native cultivars which is really fun and exciting to see this is great news because there’s so many benefits to planting natives in your garden I was also surprised that many of the plants that I thought bloomed for a very long time actually weren’t at the

Top of this list I think that when you love a particular plant it can kind of really skew results of how long it’s actually lasting all the links to the plants mentioned in this video are in the description below and if you want to check them out or even purchase them

Online and if you like this video you would also like my other plant list videos I’ll leave a link to the playlist right here and I’ll see you over in the next video Foreign

22 Comments

  1. I live right on the 6/7 line, I've noticed that crepe myrtles around here tend to be completely fine down to around 5 degrees, but every now and again we get a deeper freeze (I've seen down to around -5 to -10) and most of them die back to the roots but they mostly push new growth from the ground the next year. So I'd say they're zone 6* with the note that in 6 they may die back to the root some years

  2. Great informative video! I have all the plants that you mentioned in this video, they are beautiful and long blooming. Catmint, coneflower, hellebores, Butterfly weeds Coreopsis ,yarrow, they are truly deer resistant in my garden.

  3. I hate to disagree but I live in zone 5 in Vermont and Spider wort is very invasive in my garden I find it all over the place and its taken me years to remove

  4. What an excellent video……It’s nice to see such enthusiasm in young gardeners. I’m retired from my nurseries now and make very few videos any longer, but I’d like to have had half your enthusiasm. Well done, I agree with some of your assessments, even here in the UK, Eupatorium is one of the best attractors of pollinating insects I’ve ever seen…..there is a smaller version here called Baby Joe, it’s not that much smaller but better for those with tiny gardens. There is a national campaign against Spanish bluebells going on here due to the possibility of them wiping out the native English form…..which is weaker and somewhat one sided.
    Anyway…..Best wishes…..Malcolm (Plantsmans Corner)

  5. I know Day lilies are edible. I'm always interested to know if a plant is edible and/or medicinal.
    And I've read that Spiderwort will turn pink in the presence of nuclear radiation. Fortunately I don't have first hand knowledge on that.

  6. Technically an annual, but my picks this year are Zinnias, so attractive to the Monarch and bumble bees, and Dahlias. I also have a self seeded Linaria which has flowered for 8-10 weeks. New Zealand viewer.

  7. This is a great list. One comment: be sure you REALLY like Spiderwort before you plant it since you can never get rid of it. I pull them out all the time and they just keep coming back.

  8. We had to remove a few dying trees so I have a spot in my mostly shady yard where I can actually plant flowers that grow in sun. I don’t want to plant anything invasive. I’ve heard if the word weed is in the common name, it’s usually invasive. Can you advise?

  9. I have heavy clay soil on the bank of a river I have grown many of your recommendations but they Peter out after a year or two. Day lily does well hydrangea too, sedum and I am going to try Chaste tree this year.

  10. Thank you, I really appreciate knowing some of the longest blooming perennials to attract pollinators to my garden, especially the perennials so you don't have to plant them every year!

  11. I enjoyed this video very much. I am in 8b coastal NC. Society garlic blooms 6 months for me! I love this plant so much. I think you cn only grow it in zones 7 – 10.

  12. Really, really, really good video! Thanks. Adding value beyond the generic videos out there. Would've been even more perfect if you'd presented the bloom times in some sort of rank order for better comparison, or compared different classes of flowering plants. Subscribed!

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