Fragrant Gardens Portland OR

Planting the right annuals can add a great deal of fragrance to your garden.

Local Companies

Aarons Sprinkler and Landscape
360- 892-3228
208 SE 103rd Ave
Vancouver, WA
Drakes 7 Dees Garden Center & Landscaping
888- 255-9225
16519 SE Stark St Portland
Vancouver, WA
Cascade Greenhouse
360- 892-9494
2201 NE 112th Ave
Vancouver, WA
Trans Nursery & Landscaping
360- 695-7415
5105 NE St Johns Rd
Vancouver, WA
Helensview Nursery
360- 573-8778
1001 Y St
Vancouver, WA
All Seasons Plants
360- 571-3443
505 NW 88th St
Vancouver, WA
Aitkens Salmon Creek Garden
360- 573-4472
608 NW 119th St
Vancouver, WA
Tc Gardens
360- 574-6619
15501 NW 11th Ave
Vancouver, WA
Suncrest Landscaping & Design Inc
360- 834-6644
27509 SE 15th Ct
Vancouver, WA
Yard N Garden Land Inc
360- 573-7172
1501 NE 102nd St
Vancouver, WA

Gardening All-in-One For Dummies

Adapted From: Gardening All-in-One For Dummies

Of all the senses, smell most strongly evokes memory. The strong perfume of sweet peas, or the spicy smell of nasturtiums can bring back an acute longing for a favorite garden from the past.

The flower fragrances you prefer are as personal as the perfume or aftershave lotion you choose to wear. Plant generously so that you have plenty of flowers and leaves to pick for bouquets and bowls of potpourri. Even a few sprays of the unassuming common mignonette (Reseda odorata) can scent a room or front porch. As a rule, choose the more old-fashioned varieties of flowers, which usually tend to be more fragrant than modern hybrids; you may need to order seed packets to find the older, most strongly scented varieties.

Remember to add a few fragrant blooms to every pot, window box, or hanging basket. Concentrate sweet-smelling flowers near walkways, entries, patios, and decks so that you and your guests can enjoy them often. Some plants don't waste their scent on the daylight hours; they reserve their allure for night-flying moths and their pollinating ways. For instance, flowering tobacco (Nicotiana) and the moonflower vine release their sweet scent on the evening air and, thus, are an ideal addition to planting beds or pots near bedroom windows or on patios that you use in the evening.

Here are some favorite easy-care annuals that add fragrance to the garden:

  • Heliotrope. Dark, crinkly leaves show off vanilla-scented purple or dusky-white flowers.

  • Mignonette. This little plant is easy to grow from seed and has an amazingly strong, sweet fragrance.

  • Nicotiana, or flowering tobacco. The white flowers have a nearly tropical scent that is particularly strong in the evening.

  • Night-scented stock. This old-fashioned, early blooming favorite has the scent of cloves.

  • Scented-leafed geraniums. Fuzzy, splotched, and streaked leaves come in a wide variety of scents, from chocolate, to cinnamon, lemon, and mint.

  • Sweet alyssum. Masses of tiny scented flowers make this a favorite edging plant.

  • Sweet peas. A childhood favorite for many people, the older varieties of sweet peas retain the sweetest of scents all day long.

  • Sweet William. Gardeners have grown this plant since Elizabethan times for its spicy, sweet fragrance.


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Featured Local Company

Aarons Sprinkler and Landscape

360- 892-3228
208 SE 103rd Ave
Vancouver, WA