• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • Gardening
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Home Garden Tips
    • Seed Starting
    • Compost and Fertilizer
    • Tools & Equipment
    • Butterfly Gardens
    • Pests & Problems
    • Birds and Wildlife
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • House Plants
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
    • Growing Flowers
  • Recipes
    • Easy Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Books & Classes
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
    • Herbalism Classes
    • Books by Jeanne Grunert
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

The July Garden

July 11, 2009 by Jeanne


The July flower garden here at Seven Oaks is hot, hot, hot – brimming with eye popping oranges, yellows and golds while temperatures soar. I seem to have planted midsummer blooming perennials that are just saturated with color. It’s a total accident. I have about as much garden design instinct as I do the ability to do calculus (that is: zero ability). The weeds are taking over, but I hope to get out in the evenings and make a dent in them later this week.

My favorite flowers blooming now are the Echinacea – coneflower. I bought seeds in 2007, a kit from Park Seeds. I’m always buying kits. I was told that coneflower is difficult to start from seed. Maybe, maybe not. These seem to love it here in the bright full sun garden that gets hot direct sun all day long.

The kit included purple, Echinacea “White Swan” and a golden color. Now they are all blooming…just stunning clusters of them in the little island garden in the middle of the lawn. The birds love them. They land on them as they swoop over the lawn, and I think they are enjoying the seeds too.

Before temperatures soar, enjoy these hot flower colors in the July garden here in southern Virginia!

Filed Under: Personal

Previous Post: « Empty Nest
Next Post: Hot Color Combinations »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Colleen Wms

    July 11, 2009 at

    I love the color combinations you have there!

  2. AnnF

    July 12, 2009 at

    Coneflower from seed difficult? No way. It spreads itself. It also is a great candidate for winter sowing. With constant temp. the indoor germination rate can be low or prolonged – but that can be overcome.

  3. Jeanne

    July 12, 2009 at

    Thanks Ann – I’m going to have to look into that. I didn’t have a problem growing them. Maybe the advice came from someone who did! I hope they reseed. I really love them. Thanks for leaving a post.

  4. Jeanne

    July 12, 2009 at

    Thanks Colleen! Now I have all the pictures posted – I raced out yesterday before checking to see if the pictures were up. Thank you for leaving a comment!

  5. Colleen Wms

    July 12, 2009 at

    I was wondering what the blue was in there when I looked yesterday. Now, this morning I look and right away I see that they are bachelor buttons? Yes or no? I don’t have them.

  6. Jeanne

    July 13, 2009 at

    Yes those are Bachelor’s Buttons. What happened is that I took a dozen pictures of the perennial garden, then happened to be in the back near a little bed of annuals and saw butterflies on the zinnias. I stopped to take pictures. Then I went inside and uploaded the pictures, intending to post the perennial pictures first then this one. Well only this one loaded – and I had to shut down the computer and run out to the grocery store. Yikes. So I posted a picture of ANNUALS with my post on perennials.

    Some garden blogger I am…

    So Colleen, yes, these are annuals – zinnia, Bachelor’s Buttons, and some marigolds.

    The blog post I did on July 12 features the perennials and a few annuals such as my hot pink morning glory against the yellow daisies and rudbeckia.

    Good catch!

Footer

a red knockout rose

June Gardening Tips: Everything You Need to Do in Your Garden This Month

I’m sharing these June gardening tips for gardening zone 7B. However, you can easily adapt them to your gardening zone. June is one of those months that feels like there’s so much to do in the garden you don’t know where to start. Fortunately, nature gives you extra-long days and plenty of sunshine! Whether you…

Read More

watering can with plants

Growing Ginger in the Home Garden

Growing ginger is fun. I was surprised to learn that I could grow ginger in Zone 7B, central Virginia. I attended a lecture by Ann Codrington of Nisani Farms several years ago. She discussed growing both ginger and turmeric. Her farm is in Maryland, but I discovered that both plants can be grown in both…

Read More

borage flower

Companion Planting with Herbs: Your Secret Weapon for a Healthier, Happier Garden

Every summer, without fail, I plant basil at the end of the raised beds. These are the beds filled with Roma tomatoes, the ones we harvest by the bushel to make our salt-free organic tomato sauce. My tomatoes thrive. “Did you know that basil repels aphids?” an organic gardener friend mentioned to me casually one…

Read More

chive plants in bloom with lettuce

Growing vs. Wild Foraging Medicinal Herbs: My Perspective

Growing vs. wild foraging medicinal herbs is a real concern among newbie herbalists. The other day, I shared pictures of my herb seedlings (mallow, parsley, and savory) on Facebook. A nervous nellie immediately wrote, “I would be so AFRAID to do that! How can you know they are safe?” Well, first of all, parsley and…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme