What can I plant that's easy, colorful, and inexpensive

I need to put down some flowers in front of my house. The previous owner put out dull plants and bushes that are not helped by being in front of a brown, brick ranch.

The trouble is, I grew up in New York City and know NOTHING about plants and gardening. I haven’t killed the lawn yet in the 3 1/2 years we’ve been here, but I’m working on it. But this is for the dirt areas by the walkway and front of the house.

So, what I would like is some suggestions for flowers I can put in that are:

  1. Easy to plant
  2. Inexpensive
  3. Colorful
  4. In bloom for a relatively long season (this is the Cincinnati area, so consider that)

I know it’s a lot to ask, but I’m so poorly-educated on the subject that I hope there’s an obvious plant/flower out there that I just don’t know about.

Thanks, from your brown-thumbed INRS!

Salvia, marigolds, pansies are all very easy to maintain, have lots of color all season long.

The petunias in my garden have been flowering for something stupid like 6 months now. Pretty, too.

  1. Easy to plant
  2. Inexpensive
  3. Colorful
  4. In bloom for a relatively long season (this is the Cincinnati area, so consider that)

Dandelions

You don’t say anything about you lighting.
Sunny
Partial Sun (morning or afternoon)
Shade

A general rule of thumb is that if you go to one of the big-box home improvement stores, the gardening centers there will mostly be populated with cheap and easy-to-grow stuff, particularly the flats of annuals in little square pots. Wander around, see what colors appeal to you.
Pansies and snapdragons come in a zillion colors and are cheap and relatively undemanding.

Marigolds come in orange/yellow shades and are cheap and relatively undemanding.

All 3 bloom best in full/partial sun and not very well in deep shade.

Salvia, cosmos and zinnias all do great in hot summer weather - they need full sun, though.

Kitchen herbs such as chives and oregano are easy to grow and smell nice - ditto the full sun thing, though.

If you have shade, hostas have big, colorful leaves and are pretty tough.
One more thought: look around and see what your neighbors are growing. Drive through a slightly ritzier area than yours and see what they’ve got in their front yards. Odds are, it’ll do OK in your yard, too.

I’m a huge fan of perennials over annuals. It’s cool to see them come back each spring (and is easy to care since you’re not planting every spring).

Downside is they seem to be less enthusiastic about flowering over being green.

Impatience fit your criteria. They grow low to the ground, come in bright colors and bloom all Summer. They are suitable for partial shade.

It depends on your sun. Does the front of the house get a lot of sun? I’d rip the bushes out. That look is over.

It’s Impatiens, but I was going to say the same thing. As long as you have full sun at least part of the day, they are impossible to kill and flower prettily.

They won’t grow in shade though.

Yes, these will be in partial shade, except for a few I plant under a Japanese maple. Those will be in some shade 100% of the time.

Oopsie. Thanks for the reminder.

I planted a whole flower bed last year with zinnias (they do like the sun, though) and they bloomed all summer in in a riot of colors. This year I got more zinnia seeds, went out to look at the bed just a couple days ago, and it is covered with baby zinnia plants. They self-seeded, I don’t know if there’s room to plant more!.. Yeah, go to a garden center, they have everything laid out for you with signs for what likes shade, sun, how tall, etc.

I use marigolds for the purpose the OP describes.

In the fall I save the seeds produced by the plants and replant in spring. Haven’t had to buy seeds for marigold for, oh, about 12 years now.

I would put in perennials for the bulk of the area, and highlight it with spots of annuals that bloom so prettily for so long (the usual suspects have been named - your pansies and impatiens and geraniums). Nasturtiums are also good candidates for annuals. You extend the bloom time of your flowers by deadheading, too - pinching off spent blooms.

I got a packet of nasturtium seeds from the dollar store last year and they made for a fantabulous garden! Also, I learned that the flowers are edible (and kind of yummy).

Those instant mixed wildflower, mat impregnated rolls, and seed packs are pretty nice. Especially if you want something more naturalistic. Just sprinkle the se seeds or cut out the mat and water heavily, sit back, and wait.

I’d probably go for the impatiens, maybe in a mix of colors. They’re not finicky about watering levels or much of anything else, they bloom all summer, and you can get a 6-pack at pretty much any place that sells plants for about $2. And (for me) best of all, you never have to deadhead them.

Petunias are pretty, but you have to pinch off the faded blooms constantly–if you leave them a day or two longer than you should, they get slimy and then dry up into a brown scaly wad. It’s icky.

Though if you truly want to make things easier on yourself in the long haul, you’ll mix in a few perennials. They cost more than annuals like impatiens, more in the $10-$20/plant range, but you only have to buy and plant them the once, and many types will propogate themselves. If you buy a couple a year, after a while you’ll never have to plant again. Columbines would work with your light situation, and they’re incredibly low-maintenance and spread pretty readily.

Pansies are not going to bloom all season long in Cincinnati. They poop out when the weather gets hot. They’ll come back when the weather turns cool again. In your zone, in fact, you can probably plant them in the fall and get very early bloom. But that doesn’t help you for this year, now, does it?

The “Wave” variety of petunias don’t need deadheading and bloom like crazy.

If you have a problem with Japanese beetles, you can plant some Four O’Clocks away from your main garden as a “trap crop”, Japanese beetles LOVE to eat Fours, and as an added side-benefit, they are toxic to the beetles, so they land, have a snack, and fly off to die

Fours look vaguely Nasturtium-esque, kind of a mix between Nasturtiums and Morning Glories (Nast. foliage, Morning Glory-esque trumpetlike flowers)

I thought impatiens was recommended for shady areas. I planted some on the north side of the garage – they got very little sun and they bloomed well into fall.

So another recommendation for impatiens – the double variety looks like little roses. I don’t even “plant” them. I get a hanging basket (about $25 for a big basket) and sit the basket in a barrel planter. The planter has dirt in it up to the bottom of the basket, so it looks like the planter is planted, but it’s not. Me so lazy.

The cool thing about impatiens is that they tell you when they want water – they’ll start to droop. Water 'em and they’ll perk right up.