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Seasons change. So why shouldn't your plants? From lush Summer displays to colorful arrangements that withstand the cold, dreary days of Winter, we can help bring your flowerpots and windowboxes to life.
When considering your containers, don’t confine your thinking to summer planting schemes alone. It’s quite a reassurance that spring has arrived to see the early spring bulbs bursting forth outside your window. Whether you’re entertaining for Easter, or you are planning an early spring luncheon, a colorful pot at your front door helps guests shrug off the winter blahs. We employ the use of silks, drieds and branches in many of our spring arrangements, as they stand up well to the periods of persistent wet weather and occasional frosty nights that we experience through April. These displays remain in place through mid-May.

When the temperatures start to heat up, so do our planting schemes. Windowboxes become laden with foliage and flowers spilling forth in abundance and flowerpots house some of the most interesting tropical plants around. Working with in monochromatic schemes can produce just as much interest as mixing it up, but the true order of the season is foliar interest. Whether your style is English, tropical, Mediterranean or Americana we can provide you with a dazzling display that is installed mid-May and keeps blooming through October.
Melancholy and mysterious, shades of red and gold come alive in the late afternoon sun of autumn. Colorful foliage and bright gourds give us their best effort one last time. Grasses sway in the fall breeze as leaves swirl downward, waiting to be raked into a pile made for jumping in. Versatile and long-lasting, fall plantings help us to hang onto the summer’s magic just a little while longer...
Is there life in the garden following the first hard frost? There is when you have container gardens. After Thanksgiving we work to install evergreens, branches, bows and embellishments that will delight any passerby, or give a bit of reassurance when spotted from a window—life persists. Whether sugar-coated with a light frost or snow-covered later in the season, you can have color and interest at your door and outside your window. Winter need not be gray anymore.
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