Nasturtiums
Buying pot grown shrubs in advance, though after you have worked out how many of what and where they are to go, is a good idea. Do not purchase ‘bare-rooted’ (growing in the ground) shrubs now as they should only be moved during the winter. Purchase pot grown ones only; here are some more suggestions for use as hedging or specimen species: Jasminium, motia, chambeli, chumpa, frangipani, plumbago, cestrum nocturnum (raat-ki-rani) phylanthus, justica, murraya exotica (kamni), ixora and jatropha.
Having discussed growing climbers up house walls to reduce interior temperatures in a very recent column, I won’t repeat it here but will say that climbers and creepers, both those grown for purely aesthetic purposes and those grown for edible fruits / vegetables, deserve more garden space than they are currently given. If, for whatever reason, covering the outside of your house / apartment and even roof with plants is not a viable option then paint every conceivable surface with weatherproof, white paint as this reflects the heat of the sun back off the building / roof rather than allowing it to soak in. It is amazing what an exterior coat of white paint can do to keep down interior temperatures.
Having encouraged, one hopes, you to put your thinking caps on, let’s now take a look at which hot weather tolerant flowers can be seed sown right now. The ever popular zinnia always and under often very difficult to handle weather conditions, still manages to steal the summer thunder by dazzling the eye of the beholder to the point of ‘sun-glasses’ required. Zinnias can be found in almost every hue imaginable — although hot pink, fire-engine red, flame orange and golden yellow tend to dominate — in single, double and frilled forms and with miniature, medium tall and gigantic growing habits. Lime green versions, ice-cool in appearance, are increasingly popular with gardeners and flower arrangers alike. Then there are the always gorgeous sunflowers in an ever expanding colour range from creamy white, lemon, traditional golden yellows, plus, pink, mouth-watering chocolate shades, reds, crimsons, oranges, bi-colours to light up the greyest of days and luminous, astonishing ghostly shades to illuminate the dark of the night. Like Zinnias, sunflowers can now be found in an entire multitude of shapes, forms and heights. Also keep your eyes open for seeds of orange cosmos, pink, red and white cosmos, yellow cosmos, tithonia, tagetes, gailardia, petunias, amaranthus of all kinds, nicotiana, gompherena, portulaca, rudbeckia, matricaria and gerberas.