Transform your front porch with a beautiful container garden that delivers long-lasting color all season and attracts hummingbirds nonstop! 🌺 In this video, I’ll show you how to design and plant a stunning porch container using easy, proven plant combinations that thrive in pots and keep blooming for months.
You’ll learn:
How to choose the best flowers for continuous color
My go-to plants that hummingbirds LOVE
How to blend sun and shade plants in one porch space for a cohesive, layered look
Simple design tips to keep your containers visually balanced, even with different light needs
How to keep your planters healthy and blooming all season long
I’ll also walk through how to strategically place containers based on sunlight patterns—so you can mix different plant types across your porch while still creating one unified, polished design.
Whether you’re working with full sun, partial shade, or a mix of both, this approach makes it easy to create a vibrant, low-maintenance display that also supports pollinators.
Perfect for: front porches, patios, small spaces, and beginner gardeners.
🌿 Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more gardening ideas and seasonal inspiration!
#ContainerGardening #HummingbirdGarden #FrontPorchDecor #PollinatorGarden #GardeningTips #FlowerContainer
Other videos to check out!
Snapdragon video: https://youtu.be/SAF9O2DK4bY
My 5 favorite annuals video: https://youtu.be/jhvrx4-b78Q
Tea olive video: https://youtu.be/ffhmFKfUIuE
Happily gardening in zone 7b/8a in GA!
Music: iMovie Soundtrack – Playful

4 Comments
Love your choices and how you thought about how each plant works in the environment/each other. Subscribed!
I enjoyed this video very much and I loved your plant choices for your containers. Thank you! Well done! 👌🪴🥰
My petunia is always a Supertunia vista series and do best in morning sun and afternoon shade. It’s on drip irrigation for 15 min daily and I give it liquid fertilizer once q 1-2 weeks. Mine last until November here in zone 8a Ga.
Where did you find the calibrachoa hybrid? I have great success with them coming back in my south facing gardens.