𤯠Lazy Gardener’s Dream: 17 Perennials That THRIVE in Containers/Pots With ZERO Effort!
We’ll Cover
⢠The “Set-and-Forget” soil mix that eliminates 90% of container gardening problems
⢠Why drought-loving perennials like Sedum and Lavender get MORE beautiful when you neglect them
⢠Shade superstars that turn problem areas into your proudest gardening accomplishments
⢠The shocking truth about plant #12 that thrives on your forgetfulness
⢠Winter-blooming Hellebores that produce gorgeous flowers through snow and ice
⢠Container sizing secrets that cut your watering time in half
⢠Year-round color combinations that look professionally designed with zero maintenance
⢠The three golden rules that make every single plant on this list bulletproof in containers
Discover 17 bulletproof perennials that will make you look like a gardening genius without the daily fussing. From drought-warriors that laugh at neglect to shade champions that glow in dark corners, these container superstars prove that the most spectacular gardens are often the easiest to maintain. Perfect for seniors who want maximum beauty with minimum effort.
Container gardening seniors, low maintenance perennials, drought tolerant plants, shade perennials containers, lazy gardening tips, senior friendly gardening, perennial containers, easy care plants, golden years gardening, senior outdoor living
#LazyGardening #ContainerGardening #SeniorsGardening #PerennialContainers #LowMaintenance #DroughtTolerant #GoldenSeniorsLiving #GardeningOver50 #EasyGardening #OutdoorLiving #UnitedStates
Perfect for: Seniors seeking low-maintenance gardening solutions, beginners who’ve killed plants before, busy gardeners wanting maximum impact with minimal effort, those with mobility limitations preferring container gardening, and anyone wanting professional-looking results without professional-level maintenance.
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What if I told you there are 17 plants that will come back year after year in pots, even if you’re the type of person who kills silk plants? I’m about to share the ultimate lazy gardener secret that will have your neighbors asking for your green thumb secrets. Before we dive into these game-changing plants, do me a huge favor, smash that subscribe button and ring the notification bell. We’re dropping 50 plus lazy gardening secrets this month that’ll transform your outdoor spaces with minimal effort. And here’s the deal. Also, comment right now and tell me what’s the last plant you accidentally killed. Don’t worry, after today, those days are over. I’ve been gardening for over 30 years. And I’ve learned that the best gardens aren’t the ones that require daily fussing. They’re the ones that practically take care of themselves. These 17 perennials are my secret weapons. And by the end of this video, you’ll have a foolproof blueprint for containers that look professional but require almost zero maintenance. Wait until you see plant number 12. It literally gets more beautiful when you neglect it. Let’s start with the plants that laugh at drought. These five superstars will make you forget everything you thought you knew about highmaintenance gardening. First up, Sedum, also called live forever. And trust me, the name isn’t an exaggeration. This succulent perennial needs water maybe once every 3 weeks in summer. And here’s why. Those thick fleshy leaves are like tiny water tanks. Each leaf can store weeks worth of moisture. I’ve seen sadum survive 2 months without water and come back stronger than ever. The varieties are incredible. You’ve got autumn joys that turns gorgeous pink in fall, dragon’s blood that carpets your container in red, and metrona that stands tall with pink flowers. The best part, they multiply naturally. So, one plant becomes a whole collection. And here’s something most people don’t know. Sedums actually get stressed and produce more vibrant colors when you underwater them slightly. It’s like they reward your neglect. Pause the video and guess how long sadum can survive without water. I’ll give you the shocking answer in just a moment. Plant two, lavender. Lavender isn’t just gorgeous and fragrant, it’s practically indestructible in containers. Here’s the lazy gardener’s secret that most people get backwards. The worse your soil drainage, the more lavender struggles. But in containers, it’s absolute heaven. Lavender evolved in the rocky, dry hills of the Mediterranean. So, it’s programmed to thrive on neglect. I plant mine in spring, water it in well for the first month, then basically ignore it. The result, months of purple spikes that smell incredible and attract every bee in the neighborhood. English lavender is the heartiest meister sit their fives harsh winters and comes back bigger each year. French lavender has those cute little rabbit ear petals on top. Spanish lavender blooms almost continuously. And here’s a pro tip. Never ever fertilize lavender. Rich soil makes it grow soft and weak. Poor lean soil makes it aromatic and tough. It’s the one plant that actually prefers to be a little hungry and thirsty. Plant three, Russian sage. Russian sage is like having a professional landscape designer secret weapon in your container collection. This plant is absolutely magical. It has silvery white stems, delicate blue purple flowers, and an airy texture that makes everything around it look more sophisticated. Once established, you could literally go on a month-long vacation and come back to find it more beautiful than when you left. It grows about three feet tall and wide, so it’s perfect for large containers or as a backdrop plant. The flowers bloom from midsummer through fall, and even when they’re done blooming, the silvery structure looks stunning through winter. I’ve never seen a bug bother Russian sage. Deer won’t touch it, and it actually gets tougher and more beautiful in hot, dry weather. The only maintenance it needs is a hard cut back in late winter. Just chop it down to about 6 in, and it comes roaring back. It’s drought tolerant, deer resistant, and virtually pestfree. What more could a lazy gardener want? Plant four, hens and chicks. Hens and chicks are the gift that keeps giving. They literally make babies without any help from you. One container becomes three, then five. Then you’re giving plants away to all your neighbors. These incredible succulents form perfect rosettes that look like living roses made of jade. The hen is the main plant, and the chicks are the baby plants that pop up around the edges. Every single chick can be separated and planted on its own, creating an endless supply of new plants. They come in amazing varieties. Some are bright green, others are deep red. Some have fuzzy textures, others are smooth and waxy. Cobweb hens and chicks look like they’re covered in spiderw webs. Red beauties turns burgundy and cool weather. And blue boys has an incredible blue gray color. They need virtually no water once established. They’re completely cold hearty and they thrive in the shallowest containers. I have some in containers that are only 4 in deep and they’ve been thriving for years. The best part, they’re so easy to propagate that you’ll become the neighborhood plant lady or man without even trying. Plant five. Catmint. Catmint is like catnip sophisticated cousin that went to college and got a degree and looking gorgeous. It blooms from spring to frost with clouds of blue purple flowers that butterflies absolutely go crazy for. The lazy factor. Cut it back once mid-season. Just give it a buzz cut after the first flush of blooms. Then forget about it. It’ll come back with even more flowers in bloom until hard frost. Catmint forms perfect mounds about 18 in tall and wide, making it ideal for containers. The foliage is gray green and aromatic mitter. When you brush against it, it releases this wonderful herbal scent. Unlike catnip, most cats ignore cat mint, so you don’t have to worry about neighborhood cats rolling in your containers. Walker’s low is the most popular variety, and it’s incredibly drought tolerant once established. Six Hills Giant is bigger and more dramatic. And here’s something amazing. Catmint is virtually pest and disease-free. I’ve never seen aphids, spidermitites, or any other problems on cat. It’s like nature’s perfect lowmaintenance plant. Which one of these drought warriors are you going to try first? Drop your choice in the comments and I promise to tell you how long Sidum can survive without water. Are you ready for this? I’ve documented Sidums going 75 days without water and still looking healthy. That’s over two months. Now for those tricky shady spots that make most gardeners throw up their hands in defeat. These five shade superstars will turn your problem areas into your proudest gardening accomplishments. Plant six hosta. Hostas are the lazy gardener’s best friend for shade. And here’s why minus plant once enjoy for decades. I have hostas in containers that are over 15 years old and they get more beautiful every single year. Here’s the secret. Most people don’t know if they’re actually more beautiful in containers than in the ground because you can control their conditions perfectly. In containers, you eliminate their biggest enemies, slugs and poor drainage. Hostas come in incredible variety. Some have leaves as small as quarters. Others have leaves bigger than dinner plates. Some in substance has enormous chartreuse leaves that glow in shade like they’re lit from within. Blue Angel has huge blue gray leaves with white flowers. Patriots has green leaves with crisp white edges that look hand painted. The fragrant varieties like fragrant bouquet have flowers that smell like gardinas. And here’s the best part about hostas in containers. You can move them around. Put them on your shady deck in summer, then move them to a protected spot for winter. They’re completely cold hearty, deer resistant, and the only maintenance they need is cutting back the flower stocks if you don’t want seeds and dividing them every few years to make more plants. One hosta becomes three, then six, then you’re sharing with everyone you know. Plant seven, coral bells. Coral bells give you year round color without depending on flowers. Purple, silver, lime green, orange, burgundy. It’s like having a living rainbow that thrives on neglect. These incredible perennials have completely revolutionized shade gardening because they provide constant color from their foliage alone. Palace Purple has deep burgundy leaves that look almost black. Lime Ricky glows chartreuse even in deep shade. Silver scrolls looks like someone painted silver patterns on purple leaves. Fire chief’s changes from red to orange to burgundy throughout the seasons. The flowers are just a bonus. Delicate spikes that dance above the foliage in early summer. But even without flowers, hukare is put on a show all season long. They’re evergreen in mild climates, so you get color even in winter. In containers, they’re absolutely perfect because they don’t spread aggressively like they sometimes do in the ground. They form neat compact clumps that look sophisticated and intentional. I water mine maybe once a week in summer, never fertilize them, and they reward me with constant beauty. They’re also incredibly longived. I have some that are going on their eighth year with no signs of slowing down. Plant eight, Atobbay. Here’s plant that shocks everyone. Atobay produces these incredible feathery flowers that look highmaintenance but are actually bulletproof in shade containers. When people see a bay blooming, they assume it must be difficult to grow because the flowers are so spectacular. The truth. Once established, Atobbades are nearly indestructible in shade. These perennials produce plumes of flowers in white, pink, red, purple, and peach that look like colorful feathers dancing above fernie foliage. Pridal veil has pure white plumes that glow in shade. Finol has deep red flowers with dark foliage. Deutseland blooms early with pristine white flowers. The blooming season lasts for weeks and even after the flowers fade, the foliage stays attractive all season. In containers, a badades are happy with morning sun or bright shade, and they actually prefer consistent moisture, which is easy to provide in containers. They’re completely cold hearty, deer resistant, and divide naturally every few years to give you more plants. The spent flower plumes can be left on for winter interest or cut back for a tidier look. Either way, they come back reliably every spring with even more flowers. Comment feathers if you’ve never seen anything like these blooms. Seriously, Atobbade flowers are nature’s art project. Plant nine, Japanese painted fern. This fern looks so exotic people will think you hired a professional landscaper. Reality water occasionally ignore completely. Japanese painted fern is hands down the most beautiful fern you can grow and it’s ridiculously easy in containers. The fronds are silver gray with purple stems and green edges. It looks like someone painted each leaf with metallic paint. Burgundy laces has more purple tones. Silver Falls cascades beautifully from containers, and ghost is almost pure silver. These ferns are completely different from the boring green ferns most people think of. They light up shady corners like living sculptures. In containers, they’re perfect because they stay compact and well- behaved. They never get invasive, never need dividing, and they’re incredibly drought tolerant once established. I water mine when I remember, which isn’t very often, and they always look perfect. They die back in winter, but come back reliably in spring with fresh, colorful fronds. They’re also deerroof, slugresistant, and virtually pest-free. Plant 10. Burgania. Burgia is the ultimate set it and forget it plant. glossy leaves year round, early spring flowers, and it actually prefers being slightly ignored. Burgia has these incredible thick glossy leaves that look almost tropical, but it’s completely cold hearty. The leaves are huge, sometimes 8 in across, and they form perfect rosettes. In spring, clusters of pink or white flowers appear on tall stems before most other plants are even waking up. Winter glows has leaves that turn burgundy red in cold weather. Baby doll is more compact for smaller containers. The best part about Burgania is that it’s evergreen, so you get year round structure and interest from your containers. It tolerates deep shade, drought, poor soil, and complete neglect. I planted some Burgia 5 years ago, watered it in, and have basically ignored it since. It’s never looked better. The thick waxy leaves shed water and resist damage from wind and weather. It’s like having a permanent living sculpture in your shade containers. Now, we’re getting to the plants that will make your neighbors stop their cars and ask for your secrets. These five colorful showstoppers prove that the most spectacular gardens are often the easiest ones to maintain. Plant 11. Blackeyed Susan. Blackeyed Susan is like sunshine in a pot that keeps blooming no matter what you throw at it. Drought, heat, neglect, it just keeps going. Tearful perennial produces golden yellow flowers with dark centers from midsummer through fall. And I mean masses of flowers. One mature plant can have over 100 blooms at once. Goldm is the classic variety that’s won awards for good reason. It’s incredibly reliable and long blooming. Cherokee sunset has semi-double flowers that look almost like little suns. Prairie sun has yellow petals with green centers instead of dark ones. The best part about blackeyed susans in containers is that they’re self-seeding, so you get volunteer seedlings that you can pot up or share. They’re also incredible wildlife magnets. Butterflies, bees, and goldfinches all flock to these flowers. In late fall, I leave the seed heads on because they provide food for birds through winter. The plants themselves are completely cold hearty and actually perform better in their second and third years than they do as new plantings. I water mine maybe once a week in the hottest weather, never fertilize them, and they reward me with months of continuous color. They’re also completely deer and rabbit resistant. Here’s plant number 12 that I promised would shock you. Menure gets more silvery and beautiful the more you neglect it. Overwatering actually makes it look worse. This plant thrives on your forgetfulness. Most people can’t believe this when they first hear it, but lamb’s ear is originally from rocky, dry regions where it evolved to handle extreme conditions. Those incredibly soft fuzzy leaves that feel exactly like a lamb’s ear aren’t just for showmenure. They’re covered in tiny hairs that reflect sunlight and conserve moisture. When you overwater lamb’s ear, the leaves get soft and prone to rot. But when you underwater it, the leaves become more silver, more fuzzy, and more beautiful. Big ears has enormous leaves that are incredibly dramatic. Helen vonstein rarely flowers, so all the plants energy goes into producing those stunning silver leaves. Cotton bowl has flowers that look like cotton balls. In containers, lamb’s ear is absolutely perfect because you can control drainage perfectly. I plant mine in spring, water them in well for the first month, then basically ignore them except during extreme drought. The result, plants that look like living silver sculptures that get more beautiful every year. They’re also deerproof, drought tolerant, and they spread slowly to fill their containers without becoming invasive. Comment shocking if this just blew your mind. I love seeing people’s reactions when they learn that neglect makes plants more beautiful. Plant 13. Dillies. Dillies are the workhorse of lazy gardening. Each bloom lasts one day, but each plant produces dozens and dozens of buds. So, it’s like having a flower subscription service that never ends. I have dlies that have been blooming continuously from June through September with new flowers opening every single day. The variety in dlies is absolutely incredible. They come in every color except true blue and pure white. Stella deoro is the classic yellow that blooms all season. Purple deoro is the purple version that’s equally reliable. Happy returns is pale yellow and blooms from spring to frost. Pardon me as red flowers with yellow throats. Some varieties are fragrant, some bloom at night, some have double flowers, and some have flowers as big as dinner plates. In containers, dlies are incredibly easy. Because they’re so adaptable, they’ll take full sun or partial shade, wet conditions or dry conditions, rich soil or poor soil. Once established, I water mine maybe twice a week in summer and never fertilize them. They multiply naturally, so every few years you can divide them and have more plants to fill more containers or share with friends. They’re also completely cold hearty, deer resistant, and virtually pestfree. The only maintenance is deadheading the spent blooms if you want them to keep blooming, but even that’s optional. Plant 14. Ornamental grasses. Ornamental grasses add movement and texture with zero maintenance. Plant them, water them in, then pretend they don’t exist. They’ll reward you with year round beauty. Grasses bring something to container gardens that no other plants can nass movement and sound. When the wind blows through them, they create this wonderful rustling sound and gentle movement that makes your whole garden feel alive. Carl Forers’s feather reed grass stands tall and narrow with wheat colored plumes. Morning lights has narrow leaves with white edges and pink plumes in fall. Hamilton fountain grass has fuzzy bottle brush flowers that kids love to touch. Blue fescue forms perfect little blue grey mounds that look good year round. The beauty of grasses in containers is that they provide structure and interest through all four seasons. In spring, they emerge fresh and green. In summer, they develop their characteristic forms. In fall, many change to gorgeous colors, gold, orange, burgundy. In winter, they provide structure and interest when everything else has died back. I cut mine back in late winter, but some people prefer to leave them standing all winter for the architectural interest. Either way, they come back reliably every spring and get bigger and better each year. Plant 15, cone flour. Cone flowers are the triple threat meers gorgeous blooms. They attract birds when they go to seed and they multiply naturally. Three benefits from one lazy planting. Cone flowers have become incredibly popular in recent years because plantreeders have developed amazing new varieties in colors that didn’t exist when I started gardening. The classic purple magnuses is still gorgeous and reliable. But now we have white swan, orange meadowbrite, pink double delight, green jewel, and even hot papayas. That’s bright orange red. The flowers bloom for months if you dead head them. But here’s the cool part. Meppers. If you stop deadheading in late summer, the seed heads that form are absolutely gorgeous and provide food for goldfinches and other birds through fall and winter. In containers, cone flowers are perfect because they’re drought tolerant once established. They don’t need fertilizer and they actually perform better in slightly lean conditions. Rich soil makes them grow too tall and floppy. They selfseed readily, so you’ll get volunteer seedlings that might be different colors than the parents. They’re also incredibly longived. I have some that are going on 10 years with no signs of slowing down. They’re deer resistant, drought tolerant, and virtually maintenance-free once established. Now, we’re getting to my absolute favorite category, plants that earn their keep 12 months a year. Most gardeners think container gardening is only about spring and summer, but these final two perennials will prove that wrong. These plants will make your containers look professionally designed even in the dead of winter when your neighbors gardens look like barren wastelands. Plant 16. Hellaore. Hellaors bloom in winter when everything else is dormant. Talk about lowmaintenance. They literally bloom when you can’t even get outside to fuss with them. This is the most magical plant in any lazy gardener’s collection because it produces gorgeous flowers right through snow and ice. Hellaors are also called Christmas rose or Lenton rose depending on when they bloom. The flowers come in white, pink, purple, burgundy, yellow, and even spotted varieties. Ice and roses series blooms from December through April. Wedding parties has pure white flowers that glow against winter backgrounds. Red ladies produces deep burgundy flowers that are almost black. The flowers last for actual months. A single bloom can stay beautiful from December through March. The evergreen foliage provides structure year round with thick, glossy, deeply divided leaves. In containers, they’re perfect because they prefer excellent drainage. They hate wet feet in winter, but containers solve that problem perfectly. I plant them in fall, water them in well, then ignore them until spring. They’re deerproof, rabbit proof, slugresistant, and incredibly longived. I have some that are over 12 years old and still producing more flowers every year. Plant 17, evergreen sedums. Our final category is evergreen sedums that look architectural in winter. They’re like living sculptures that require absolutely nothing from you. While most sedums die back in winter, evergreen varieties keep their structure and become even more beautiful in cold weather. Autumn fires forms perfect mounds that turn burgundy red in cold weather. Metrona has thick stems that stand through snow and ice. Blackjax has dark purple foliage that becomes almost black in winter. These plants provide four season performance. spring rosettes, summer flowers that attract butterflies, fall seed heads that feed birds, and winter architectural structure. They’re completely drought tolerant once established. I have some in containers that haven’t been watered in years, and they look better than pampered plants. They’re deer resistant, rabbit proof, and never need dividing. They actually prefer neglect and get more beautiful when you leave them alone. They’re living proof that the most beautiful gardens are often the ones we interfere with the least. Before we wrap up, I want to share the three secrets that will make every single one of these plants thrive in your containers. These are the lazy gardener shortcuts that most people learn the hard way after years of trial and error. But I’m going to save you all that heartache right now. The number one killer of container plants isn’t drought, it’s soggy roots. More plants die from overwatering than underwatering. Every container must have real drainage holes. I drill at least three half-inch holes and five or six for large containers. Put a layer of broken pottery or gravel in the bottom to create air space. Good drainage means water moves through soil at the right speed. Test it. Water should soak in within 10 15 seconds, but you should still see moisture 2 in down an hour later. My golden rule most when in doubt, wait another day before watering. Plants forgive late watering but never forgive drowning. Secret two, size matters. Small containers are plant torture chambers. They dry out too fast and freeze solid in winter. I never use containers smaller than 16 in across for perennials. Here’s the math. A plant in a 12-in container needs daily watering in summer. The same plant in a 24-in container needs water twice a week. Yes, bigger containers cost more upfront, but you get plants that thrive instead of survive, professional appearance, and way less work. I’d rather have three large, gorgeous containers than 10 small ones that constantly need attention. Secret three, the set and forget soil mix. Never use garden soil in containers. Too heavy and poor drainage. Never use cheap potting soil. mostly bark that holds too much water. My perfect recipe, quality potting mix. Add 1/3 perlite for drainage. Mix in 10% compost for nutrition. This drains well but holds moisture and it’s lightweight. I make a huge batch annually and store it in covered bins. Buy ingredients in bulk, much cheaper than bags of premium mix. Pro tip, you rarely need to replace soil completely. Each spring, scrape off top 2 in. Add fresh compost and slowrelease fertilizer. All right, golden family. You now have 17 bulletproof perennials that will make you look like a gardening genius. But before you go rushing off to the garden center, here’s what I need from you right now. And this is really important for our community. First, smash that like button if this video solved your gardening struggles. Seriously, every like tells YouTube that this content is valuable and helps us reach more people who are struggling with highmaintenance gardens. Second, if you’re not already subscribed to Golden Seniors Living, what are you waiting for? Hit that subscribe button and ring the notification bell because we’re dropping lazy gardening secrets every single week that will transform your outdoor spaces with minimal effort. Third, I want to see your plant choices. Comment below with which three plants from today’s list you’re going to try first. Are you team drought tolerant with citum and lavender? Or are you going for shade drama with hostas and a stillby? Let me know in the comments. And here’s something special. If you found this helpful, share this video with that friend or family member who always claims they have a black thumb. Trust me, after they see these 17 plants, they’ll realize that successful gardening isn’t about having magic hands. It’s about choosing the right plants from the start.

28 Comments
hostas and asilbe
Iām sorry I just canāt listen to robot talk
The AI voice pronunciation IS HORRIBLE!!
This is one of the most informative garden instructions .š
omg. you're using a computerized narration, and it's badly done.
I assumed the narration was AI and I appreciated that that was indicated.Most people I know, click off a video the minute it's obvious that it's AI. I hate when videos refuse to admit they are AI. Particularly the video/visuals themselves. It's manipulative not to label it as such. AI does tend to make the viewer wonder if the information is factual or it's a video thrown together just for "likes". That being said, it looks like this video is from the US? So presumably they gave AI a script and requested AI add the voice over. So, the creator should know the proper pronunciation of each of the plants. I cringed every time it said "suh-DUMB", "Hoe-sta", "ASS-til-BAY", :DEE-li-cate" etc. Not sure if I missed others. If the creator isn't from the US or English isn't your first language, then ignore that last comment. The phrasing IS more natural. No weird breaks in the middle of a sentence or compound word. It's just the mispronunciations that are cringey. If you speak English, why don't you do the Voice Over yourself? Or if you have an accent you think might be a problem, then find an American friend to do it?
I was impressed w/ so many of what you showed. I think the hosea? lavender & feather plant is what Iād like to give a try. Iām 79 & a very late bloomer for sure. Made so many mistakes , put up way to many crosses of
āonce livedā, hopefully my next choices will be better w/ your help. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.
What areas do these plants thrive in. What about area 9?
Just can't listen to these computer voices. Obviously AI generated.
Letās see. Iāve killed rosemary, lavender,Mexican sage, Esperanza, dogwood tree, apple tree, pluot tree, three lemon treesāone in the ground and two in pots, and three lime treesāone in the ground and two in pots. Probably more but I canāt remember them. Iāve lived in Central Texas three years and Iāve killed all of these since then!
Oh, and several kinds of salvia!
Day Lillieās, hostas, & black eyed Susan are NOT deer resistant!
Mispronounced words very distracting, Hostas and day lilies gourmet lunch for the deer.
Hostas = snail fodder.
Lots of problems with pronunciation. Heuchera becomes "Hugh care"!
I've managed to kill many of these plants…Heuchera, astilbe, lavender, Russian Sage, Cat Mint…all have gone to God in my garden.
HI FGA&&OTS–SWALLOW TOO MUCH MAN JUICE TODAY
DC Police Union
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Robbery ā¬46%
ADW ā¬6%
Carjacking ā¬83%
Car Theft ā¬21%
Violent Crime ā¬22%
Property Crime ā¬6%
All Crimesā¬8%
He's been gardening for over 30 yeares?? How come he doesn't know how to pronounce SE'dum? Makes you wonder if the information being given is correct?!
See- dumb (Sedum)
I live in zone 4
Coneflowers, lilies and sedums are my favorite to try. Thxs for your help!
Itās Seeā-dum, idiots, not Sa-dumbā! Geeeeze
Hoe-stas š
Learn how to pronounce things before you narrate a video.
Very informative. The best I watched in a long time. Will try the Astilbe, black eye Susan and hostas.ā¤
A rose plant. Di Qrigh Zimbabwe
Thanks for the info. I enjoy gardening, but everything I plant seems to die , maybe Iām over watering
Why AI voice? It's so impersonal and honestly a disappointment. I started to listen andcas soon as I heard it, it turned mw off. Too many computers and less real people talking. I won't be finishing this video. It's a shame you won't put your real voice in. Goodbye human to human contact!