Hyams Garden Center carries a wide variety of pots and containers for indoor and outdoor gardening.
Made from the finest ceramic, terracotta, concrete and composite materials; and available in multiple styles and colors, these decorative containers are sure to enhance the beauty of your Low Country garden.
A Bit of Love for Your Roses
Every year, in the month of February, we are given a momentary glimpse of the beauty to come in Spring. Valentine’s Day suddenly surrounds us with bouquets of colorful cut flowers to share with those we love.
For Low Country gardening, Valentine’s Day also signals a good time to share a little tender loving “pruning” care with your rose plants.
It is good to prune while roses are dormant. The months of February and March are usually best. For fertilizing start with ‘rose-tone’ toward the end of February. One can also treat the rose plants with some All Seasons Horticultural Oil Spray to start them off clean from fungus and insects.
For hybrid tea and grandiflora roses, cut back no lower than 18 inches unless they have been damaged by pests or excessively cold weather. Alternating the height of the cuts will give the plant a more natural look.
For floribundas and polyanthas grown as a hedge, shears or hedge clippers can be used to remove one-third to one-half of height. Otherwise, clip back just below where they previously flowered or down to one-third of their length.
Just prior to the growing season, repeat-blooming old garden roses and shrub roses should be pruned. Tip-pruning throughout the growing season will encourage flower-bearing side shoots.
The Roses by Alan L. Strang
I have roses in my garden,
And their fragrance fills the air.
How I love to watch them blooming;
For they all are very fair.
Some have deep red velvet petals,
Some again are snowy white;
And the little baby pink ones,
Surely give you such delight.
Pretty birds come to my garden,
And sing there the live-long day;
Yes the birds and pretty flowers
Help and cheer us on our way.
Orchid – Flower of the Year 2023
The stunning Orchid is “Flower of the Year” for 2023.
The exotic Orchid has been delighting planet earth with its variety of colors, shapes and species for millennia. It is believed to be among the oldest and largest members of flowering plant families with scientists dating its origins between 76 million to 84 million years ago and its species numbering over 26,000.
In the ancient Chinese, Greek and Roman civilizations they were valued for their medicinal and aesthetic qualities. The Aztecs prized them as a source for warriors’ strength by drinking a mixture of flavoring from the vanilla orchid and cocoa. Today, in Asia, they are frequently displayed during the New Year as symbols of happiness.
Orchids make wonderful gifts for any number of occasions. Their long-lasting blooms delight their recipients with a visual display of exotic, colorful, living art that only Mother Nature could sculpt with such perfection.
We invite you to the Tropical Green House at Hyams Garden Center to experience for yourself the visual symphony our wide variety of Orchids provides.
Winter Blooms
Our mood brightens when we are in the presence of flowering plants. Many shrubs and trees showcase colorful stems, berries or evergreen leaves in winter. However, they cannot be compared to the emotional rush that can be triggered by winter blooms. Freezing temperatures are an ever-present danger to winter blooms. Nevertheless, their appearance and fragrance during the winter months is a chance worth taking.
Winter flowering cherry (Prunus Subhirtella Autumnalis) with semi-double pink flowers is a tree that blooms sporadically from the fall through winter on mild days. It puts up a larger show in early spring.
Japanese flowering apricot (Prunus mume) with its spicy sweet-smelling blooms can be enjoyed in late January and February. There are over 300 named cultivars of this tree show forth single or double flowers in white through shades of pink to red.
Japanese camellias bloom from late fall to early spring and help raise our spirits in the winter. No wonder why this flower is nicknamed as ‘winter rose.’
Witch Hazels show case an interesting floral display in winter. Their spiderlike flowers are comprised of four strap-like petals that look like strands of confetti that have exploded from the bud. They put up the best show in winter. The hybrids between the Asian species (Hamamaelis x intermedia) are the best for the garden. Most people prefer cultivars like ‘Arnold Promise’,’Jelena’, ‘Primavera’ and ‘Ruby Glow.’
Paperbush (Edgeworthia Chrysantha) is an uncommon deciduous shrub that bears extremely fragrant creamy yellow flowers in midwinter.
Fragrant flowers of Cornelian Cherry Dogwood (Comus Mas) delight our hearts in early spring. It is a multi-stemmed small tree with glowing yellow flowers.
When the days are cold and weary, these are some of the winter-flowering plants which can lift your spirit and cheer you up.