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Try cool colors with a few sparks of warm colors, or warm colours with a few cool colors. Keep tall plants toward the back of borders with shorter plants at the front. Bloom time, color and size are among the most common reasons for choosing plants. You may also choose them because of fragrance, texture, or culinary value. Warm colors, such as the reds and yellows of tulips and narcissus, seem to pop toward the front of a landscape, while cool colors, like the hues of purple violets or blue iris, recede into the background. One of your first considerations when planning a garden should be bloom time.
- Create the look of a tropical paradise inside your home, on your patio or in your garden this summer with this showy amaryllis.
- The Fritillaria imperialis Aurora features orange-red, bell-shaped flowers up to 3 inches across, growing in a cluster of six to eight flowers.
- The Non-Stop Begonia Collection will assure you a continuous parade of gorgeous sparkling colour for your garden and planters all summer long- right up to the frosts of fall.
- Click here to check out premium Dutch Tulips at Brecks

- The large, bold, double blooms of these luscious Dutch Double Daffodils will enhance any outdoor setting in early to mid-spring.
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