Get a Prettier Winter Garden (in the Spring)

by | Updated: Mar 27, 2024

Plant for winter interest in the spring, if you'd like a prettier winter garden

Spring flowers are starting to pop from the ground like eager party guests who want to be the first to arrive… even as Mama Nature sends us a few more snowstorms in Colorado. (Good times.)

As we ride the weather roller coaster between winter and spring, it’s a good time to ask:

Would you like your garden to look more beautiful next winter?

I’m talking about a winter garden that has neighbors stopping to admire your landscape… or simply a garden that makes your heart sing every time you look outside.

If yes, spring is the time to act.

Many of the plants that add interest to winter gardens are best planted in April, May and June.

Yep, the months when the last thing you want to think about is winter!!

Here are two examples:

Ornamental grasses

Ornamental grasses are showy landscape grasses that can add a big “wow” factor to winter gardens (and fall gardens too). Their feathery plumes and seed heads glow in the winter light. These grasses dance in the wind, adding a soothing whispering sound to gardens.

The irony is the best time to plant many ornamental grasses is when you crave color: spring!

“Warm season” ornamental grasses (the grasses that grow during sandals weather) are best planted in the late spring and early summer. This is when they’ve actively started growing, but well before you see their seed heads. Not to mention, the weather usually isn’t too hot yet.

Pro tip: This is when grasses may look a little “meh” at the garden center. They won’t have their showy plumes yet, but don’t let that deter you. Buy them in the late spring, so you can create winter interest later in the year.

Ornamental grasses don't look that showy in the spring, but spring is usually a good time to plant them.

Evergreen shrubs

The same timing is true with evergreen shrubs—woody plants that keep most of their needles or leaves during the winter.

Spring is the ideal time to plant evergreen shrubs in western states like Colorado. That way, they have all summer to settle in before you find yourself reaching for mittens again.

(Typically, you can plant evergreen shrubs in the early fall too, but with fall planting, evergreens are more at risk for not surviving the winter.)

With spring approaching…

Now’s a good time to think about what you may want to plant, so your garden shines next winter.

Related tips that may interest you:

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Ann from Go West Gardener with her flowerpots and garden

Hey there, I'm Ann

I’m a professional garden writer, master gardener and Colorado girl. I help flower lovers in the intermountain west get more beauty with less effort. More about Ann>

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