Use the height of the growing season to spot opportunities, solve problems, and create even more beautiful flower beds next year
It seems almost backward. The borders are overflowing with blossoms, butterflies drift from flower to flower, bees hum contentedly from dawn until dusk, and the garden has never looked more alive. Surely this is the time to sit back with a glass of iced tea and simply enjoy the view.
It certainly is—but it is also the best time to become a better gardener.
One of the greatest mistakes gardeners make is waiting until winter or early spring to plan next year's flower beds. By then, the vivid colors, successful combinations, disappointing gaps, and forgotten ideas have faded into memory. Summer tells the truth about a garden. It reveals which plants thrive, which struggle, where color is lacking, and where improvements can be made.
The finest gardens are rarely created in a single season. They are shaped little by little, year after year, by observant gardeners who are always thinking one season ahead.
Walk Your Garden with Fresh Eyes
Take a slow stroll through your garden every few days.
Don't just admire the flowers. Study them.
Ask yourself questions:
- Which plants are stealing the show?
- Which ones disappear behind larger neighbors?
- Are there empty spaces after spring bloomers fade?
- Are colors clashing or blending beautifully?
- Does the garden have interest from morning until evening?
- Are pollinators visiting certain plants more than others?
Carry a notebook or use your phone to record your observations. Better yet, take photographs from the same locations every couple of weeks. Those images become invaluable references during the winter planning season.
Identify the Empty Spaces
Even beautiful gardens often have awkward gaps.
Perhaps the daffodils finish in April, leaving bare soil until midsummer. Maybe a clump of irises creates wonderful blooms for two weeks before becoming little more than green leaves. Some annuals may have failed entirely after an unusually hot spell.
Summer makes these weaknesses impossible to ignore.
Instead of forgetting them, make notes immediately.
You may discover places where ornamental grasses, late-blooming perennials, asters, salvias, black-eyed Susans, coneflowers, or autumn-blooming sedums could keep the display going well into fall.
A truly memorable flower bed always has something waiting in the wings.
Observe the Sun
The angle of the sun changes throughout the growing season.
A bed that seemed sunny in March may be partly shaded by mature trees in July. Shrubs continue growing, neighboring trees cast longer shadows, and buildings create surprising pockets of afternoon shade.
Spend several days noting:
- Full-sun areas
- Morning sun only
- Afternoon shade
- Deep shade
- Dry spots beneath trees
- Areas where water tends to collect
These observations help you choose plants that naturally belong where they are planted instead of constantly fighting the conditions.
Evaluate Plant Combinations
Some combinations simply work.
Others never quite come together.
Notice which colors make each other glow.
Purple salvias beside yellow coreopsis often create vibrant contrast. White garden phlox can calm an otherwise colorful border. Silver foliage plants soften bright reds and oranges, while ornamental grasses provide movement that flowers alone cannot.
Pay attention to plant height as well.
Did taller plants hide shorter ones?
Did certain plants flop after heavy summer rains?
Would repeating one favorite plant several times create greater harmony?
Professional designers often repeat the same plants throughout a landscape because repetition creates rhythm and unity.
Think Beyond Flowers
Flowers capture attention, but foliage provides structure.
Look for opportunities to include:
- Colorful leaves
- Variegated foliage
- Fine textures
- Bold textures
- Evergreen plants
- Ornamental grasses
- Interesting seed heads
A garden rich in foliage remains attractive even when few flowers are blooming.
Divide and Multiply
Many perennials become crowded after several years.
Summer allows you to identify which clumps have become oversized and which areas could benefit from divisions during autumn or next spring.
Plants such as daylilies, hostas, ornamental grasses, bee balm, and many others can often provide free plants simply by dividing established clumps.
Those divisions become the foundation of next year's expanded flower beds.
Make a Wish List
Every visit to a public garden, botanical garden, or local nursery offers inspiration.
When something catches your eye, don't rely on memory.
Record:
- Plant name
- Bloom color
- Mature height
- Bloom season
- Sun requirements
- Where you'd like to use it
By the time autumn planting season arrives, you'll already have a thoughtful shopping list instead of making impulse purchases.
Consider Bloom Sequence
One secret of exceptional gardens is continuous bloom.
Instead of asking whether a plant is beautiful, ask when it blooms.
Try to create a sequence like this:
- Early spring bulbs
- Late spring perennials
- Early summer bloomers
- Mid-summer favorites
- Late summer flowers
- Autumn stars
- Winter structure from seed heads and evergreen plants
Each group hands the garden gracefully to the next.
Think About Maintenance
Summer also reveals which plants become high-maintenance.
Some require constant deadheading.
Others need staking.
Some spread aggressively.
Others struggle with mildew or insects.
If a plant repeatedly demands far more work than pleasure, consider replacing it with something better suited to your conditions.
Gardening should be rewarding—not a constant battle.
Plant for Pollinators
Watch where butterflies, native bees, hummingbirds, and other beneficial insects spend their time.
Their preferences often surprise us.
Plants that attract heavy pollinator activity deserve additional space in next year's design.
By expanding these favorites, you'll not only enjoy a livelier garden but also help support local ecosystems.
Sketch Your Ideas
You don't need artistic talent.
Draw a simple outline of your flower beds.
Mark existing plants.
Use colored pencils to experiment with moving plants, adding new ones, or repeating favorite groupings.
Winter becomes much less overwhelming when the planning has already begun during the growing season.
Autumn Will Arrive Sooner Than You Think
It may feel as though summer will last forever, but gardeners know how quickly the seasons turn.
The notes you make today become next spring's confidence.
The photographs you take now become valuable reminders.
The ideas you record while flowers are blooming will help you create beds that are fuller, longer-lasting, and even more beautiful next year.
The most successful gardeners aren't simply growing flowers—they're always observing, learning, and quietly planning for the season yet to come.
So while today's blossoms are still at their peak, take a little time to imagine tomorrow's garden. Future-you will be grateful that you did.
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