If you are a fan of growing a dacha or a garden with wildflowers, then the right choice for your garden are tall plants.
Lofty perennials can also make a dramatic backdrop to a garden that has plants with varying heights and colors. Here’s a list of common perennials to try in your yard.
Today we have made a small selection of the best 7 tall-growing perennials that will beautify your garden.
Oriental Lily
These hardy beauties grow 4′ to 6′ tall and burst with big, showy flowers in white, red, and pink. They smell sweet and are great for cutting gardens, clip a few blooms for bouquets and flower arrangements.
Joe Pye Weed
Butterflies love these tall perennial plants and you will too if you’re looking to go big. Joe Pye grows up to 7′ tall and 4′ wide. It bears clusters of pale pink-purple flowers that smell like vanilla.
Cutleaf Coneflower
The cut leaf is not a coneflower at all. It’s in the same family as black-eyed Susans. It can grow to a towering 9′ tall and is covered with yellow, daisy-like flowers with coneflower-like drooping petals and domed center disks.
Foxgloves
The foxglove is a plant that creates tubular blooms that range in color from red and pink to yellow and purple. It can be found growing in zones four to 10, and with the right care, it can grow to be a height of five feet. It is a very adaptive plant, so it can grow in full and partial sun as well as shade.
Boltonia
They form an ideal choice for the oblique garden and can achieve a height of three to seven feet tall depending on the cultivar.
It’s a native flower that explodes flowers of pink or white shades in the late summer or early fall. It thrives well in well-drained soil and plenty of sun-like sun-loving plants.
It can be an ideal choice for the garden borders and combines well with fall-blooming plants.
Canna
Cannas look tropical, but they’re winter hardy to Zone 7. These perennial flowers can reach as high as 6′ with big, paddle-shaped leaves and blooms in red, orange, yellow, cream, and multi-color.
Desert Candles
These flowers show in cylindrical stalks with blooms growing in a tail-like cluster above a flowerless spire, resembling a giant candle. Desert candles grow best in zones 5-8 and should be planted in an area that protects them from strong winds due to their stalk-like shape. Desert candle looks best as a background flower or by a shrub and has a warm fragrance that spreads easily in the air.