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Q1. State the difference between beinniels and perennials?
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Answer:
perennials will return year after year. This is considered a real bonus, since you don't have to replant every year. A few of these plants have a limited life. An example is delphinium, which has a lifetime of just 5 years. Most perennials will provide many years of pleasure. Some reseed themselves. Others survive so long that you'll find old homesteads where the plants have outlived the buildings.
There are hardy and tender perennials. A hardy perennial can survive cold temperatures. A tender perennial may need to be replanted every year in colder zones.
If you'd like a plant to return every year, be sure to check that it is hardy in your zone. Some perennials won't grow in warmer zones. They can't tolerate the heat and sun in those areas. Other perennials will die in the north once the weather gets too cold. So no matter which zone you live in, check for hardiness.
You can find perennial fruits, vegetables, and flowers. Some examples of fruits and vegetables are rhubarb, asparagus, and strawberries. Perennial flowers include shasta daisies, coneflowers, rudbeckia, daylilies, peonies, and many others.
A biennial takes two years from seeding before it will produce, and then it dies. In the first year, the plant grows a good root system and grows it leaves. The leaves then die off in the winter, and the plant goes into dormancy. The second year, it will bloom.
Some good examples of this type of plant are hollyhocks, Sweet Williams, and parsley. I have had all three of these plants reseed themselves, so they acted much like perennials. Some biennials will put on blooms the first year, such as foxglove and stock.
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