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sweet violets

For years my spring garden was filled with sweet violets; they seemed to sprout everywhere, covering the borders with a delicate carpet of purple, white and blue flowers.

Lately they had vanished, and I thought them gone, but here they are, surprise, sprouting between pavers instead of the flower border.

Violets look fragile, but they’re some of the hardiest perennials. They will bloom in the middle of winter in single digit temperatures if they have enough sunshine.

Their clumps propagate eagerly and they are not choosy whether they do it by runners or by seed. They prefer the former, and for this reason their spring flowers are mostly decorative, but they will follow up with a fruitful second bloom in the fall if the early season doesn’t agree with them.

Like all woodland natives, violets prefer the bright dappled shade of deciduous trees, which provides them with abundant sunshine during their blooming season and cool shade in summer, when they rest. They make excellent ground covers and require very little care.

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