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What Are the Best Tips for Growing Pansies in Winter?

O. Parker
O. Parker

To grow pansies in winter, it is important to pick cold-hardy varieties called winter pansies. One of the best tips for growing pansies in winter is to space the plants closer together than the suggested spacing for spring-planted pansies. This creates a dense cover of flowers without areas of bare soil showing. A layer of mulch after the fall planting is a good tip to help regulate soil temperature and provide insulation as the cold weather descends. Fertilizer can be applied in late winter, but spreading it at planting time is just a waste of materials because the plants won't put out a lot of new growth until the spring.

Winter pansies bloom all winter in mild climates. They can withstand some frost and light snow without damage to the plants or flowers. In areas that have long, cold, snow-covered winters, pansies will go dormant under the snow during the harshest months of winter, but they bloom all fall, right up to the first snows, and they come back early in spring as soon as the snow starts to melt off.

Pansies will go dormant under the snow during long and cold winters.
Pansies will go dormant under the snow during long and cold winters.

One of the best tips for planting pansies in winter is to space the plants close together. Summer blooming pansies grow vigorously and fill out an area, so they can be spaced farther apart. Winter pansies should be spaced 4 inches (about 10 cm) apart to create a full, lush ground cover.

The small-flower varieties are the best to choose when planting pansies in winter. Large-flower varieties tend to get weighed down under rain and light snow more quickly than small-flower varieties. Pansies are effective as bedding plants in border areas and large planters.

Winter pansies still need sun, so one of the best tips when planting pansies in winter is to select a sunny spot. After planting, a 2- to 4-inch (5- to 10-cm) layer of mulch should be spread over the garden bed. This creates an insulating layer over the soil that slows freezing and thawing. When the ground freezes and thaws rapidly at the beginning of winter, it can cause the ground to heave and disrupt the pansy root system. Fertilizer can be applied in late winter when new growth begins.

In mild, wet areas, slugs should be monitored closely. They can be picked off by hand as they appear. Slugs can quickly damage the delicate leaves and foliage of pansy plants.

Discussion Comments

Ocelot60

@heavanet- If you have a sun room or screened in porch, you can also grow pansies in these areas. Just be sure to place them in deep pots with fertilized soil, and make sure they get plenty of afternoon sun.

Heavanet

In climates that have very cold winters, growing pansies outdoors in the winter can be difficult. Though these hardy plants grow and bloom in cold temperatures, they won't if it is too cold or the ground is covered in deep snow.

To have pansies all year round, I keep some in several rectangular flower boxes in my window sills inside the house. Then, when the extremely cold temperatures have passed, I move the boxes outside on the porch. When the ground is no longer frozen, I simply transplant some of the pansies so I have them blooming on my porch and in my flower garden throughout the warm growing season.

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    • Pansies will go dormant under the snow during long and cold winters.
      By: mario beauregard
      Pansies will go dormant under the snow during long and cold winters.