Violas and cyclamens, which have already gone through autumn and winter, are starting to lose their momentum.
It will probably be finished this week, but
I’m planning to finish all the planting from autumn by the end of this month.
The final assessment, including reflection points and reflections, looks like this.
First of all, I planted a group of rose pink violas.
This is what it looked like when I first planted it.
Photographed on January 13th
Photographed on March 7th
Looking at it this way, it seems like it grew a lot from February to March.
At this time, it was at its peak in mid-March.
Photographed on March 17th
It was getting too crowded, so I had to cut it down.
Photographed on March 23rd
It’s like this now. This is the second spring.
Photographed on April 17th
This seedling was the one I had the best success with when pruning my viola this spring.
It was the cheapest, but it’s still thriving, so I think I did the right amount of pruning.
I would like to use this as a reference for next spring.
When I tried making this group of plants, I realized that the combination of various greenery was fun.
I thought it might look nice even without flowers, so I’m planning to try it this summer.
Other than that, it was definitely cute! thank you! Thank you for giving me a perfect score.
Next, we planted garden cyclamen.
This is what it looked like when I first planted it:
Photographed on December 1st
Photographed on January 18th
Photographed on March 7th
Like this.
Garden cyclamen blooms most often in early April,
Now, there are no new buds, and I am removing the flower petals every day.
Photographed on April 17th
It grew quite thick.
I didn’t write about it in the article, but the viola has already been pruned once.
Since then, only small flowers have appeared, so it might have been better not to prune it.
Photographed on April 17th
My impression is that this one was more packed than I expected.
I didn’t know that Shirotaegikku grew so thickly. It’s beautiful though.
Personally, I like the feeling of having more leeway, so I think that needs to be adjusted.
However, thank you for growing up this far! It was so beautiful that I gave it a perfect score.
Thank you so much!
I’ll use Shirotaegiku from now on, but I guess I’ll say goodbye to the others. What should I do with cyclamen?
That’s all for today, even though I’m worried.