Bloom and doom in the biennial garden: Why you should harvest before spring




San Francisco Chronicle Food & Home - Spoken Edition show

Summary: Bloom and doom in the biennial garden: Why you should harvest before spring As you probably learned in school, a biennial is a plant that lives longer than one year but less than two years. An ornamental gardener knows biennials as the garden flowers that seem to take forever to bloom — foxgloves, hollyhocks and Canterbury bells, among others. A number of food crops are also biennials.