A flower garden is a general term for any garden where flowers are grown for decorative purposes. Because flowers bloom at varying times of the year, and some plants are annual, dying each winter, the design of flower gardens can take into consideration to maintain a sequence of bloom and even of consistent color combinations, through varying seasons.

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Flora's Blog - North West Flower & Garden Show | North West Flower ...
Tweet-Up at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show. Guest Post: A Daddy ... Jasmine's Blog - San Francisco Flower & Garden Show. Kitchen Gardeners International ...www.mygardenblogs.com/NWblog/Bonnie's Flower & Garden Blog
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Hi - this is the place to get all the latest perennial flower gardening tips and blog articles, gardening questions and answers and notices of photography posted on ...www.gardening-tips-perennials.com/perennial-flower-gardening...Flower and Garden Blog
The latest Flower and Garden Tips in the Flower and Garden Blog ... Flower and Garden Blog. The Flower and Garden Blog brings you all the updates made to the website: ...www.flower-and-garden-tips.com/flower-and-garden-blog.htmlFlower Gardens @ Suite101.com: How to start, design, plant, and grow ...
... flower gardens with scented roses, wildflowers, a flower ... Check out other garden musings at the Flower Garden blog. feature articles. Christine Eirschele ...flowergardens.suite101.com/A flower garden is a general term for any garden where flowers are grown for decorative purposes. Because flowers bloom at varying times of the year, and some plants are annual, dying each winter, the design of flower gardens can take into consideration to maintain a sequence of bloom and even of consistent color combinations, through varying seasons.

Flower color is an important feature of both the herbaceous border and the mixed border that includes shrubs as well as herbaceous plants, and of bedding-out schemes limited to colorful annuals. Flower gardens are sometimes tied in function to other kinds of gardens, like knot gardens or herb gardens, many herbs also having decorative function, and some decorative flowers being edible.
One simpler alternative to the designed flower garden is the "wildflower" seed mix, with assortments of seeds which will create a bed that contains flowers of various blooming seasons, so that some portion of them should always be in bloom. The best mixtures even include combinations of perennial and biennials, which may not bloom until the following year, and also annuals that are "self-seeding", so they will return, creating a permanent flowerbed.
Another, even more recent trend is the "flower garden in a box", where the entire design of a flower garden is pre-packaged, with separate packets of each kind of flower, and a careful layout to be followed to create the proposed pattern of color in the garden-to-be.
History
Many, if not most, plants considered decorative flowers originated as weeds, which if attractive enough would sometimes be tolerated by farmers because of their appeal. This led to an artificial selection process, producing ever-prettier (to humans) flowers. This is thought to have occurred for the entire history of agriculture, perhaps even slightly earlier, when people tended to favor naturally occurring food-gathering spots. This may also explain why many flowers function as companion plants to more useful agricultural plants; they had evolved that symbiotic relationship with the food plants before either was domesticated, and therefore was found in the same area, convenient to be selected as an attractive plant.
Once domesticated, though, most flowers were grown either separately or as part of gardens having some other primary function. In the West, the idea of gardens dedicated to flowers did not become common until the 19th century, though in fact many modern gardens are indeed flower gardens.

Cutting garden
A functional garden used to grow flowers for indoor use rather than outdoor display is known as a cutting garden. It is usually only a feature of large residences.
























