The Tall Grandeur of The Late Season Garden: Favorite Plants For Fall Color
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Aug 9, 2013 · Revised on Oct 10, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Aug 9, 2013 · Revised on Oct 10, 2025
By David Salman, Chief Horticulturalist and Founder of High Country Gardens
Many folks think of spring as the peak color season in their gardens. It’s often easy to “front load” the garden with spring-flowering plants because that’s the time of the year when gardeners are visiting their local garden centers in search of plants.
However, as the growing season stretches into summer, many gardens become very green with few flowers in sight -- that does not have to be the case! Late summer and early fall gardens can have just as much color - if not more - as the spring garden, and even taller.
I always advise my fellow gardeners to get out into their gardens in late July and August to have a thoughtful look around. Take a notepad and write down your observations about where you could use more color, and decide what colors would look best. Consider our pollinators - the bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds that feast in spring also need to feed through the fall months in preparation for winter. Our gardens can make a huge difference.
Many spring flowering perennials and perennial bulbs tend to be short and medium sized plants, whereas summer and early fall blooming perennials have had many months of growth before their flowers appear. Hence the tall grandeur of late season blooming perennials. Many out-of-town visitors are stunned to see my New Mexico gardens in September. They had no idea that there are so many wonderful flowering perennials that wait until the end of the growing season to bloom. As an added bonus, most of these perennials are nectar sources for hummingbirds, so my gardens are full of these tiny sparkling birds.
The Legacy of David Salman | High Country Gardens founder David Salman was a pioneer of waterwise gardening, a passionate plant explorer, and a charismatic storyteller. His commitment to cultivating a palette of beautiful waterwise plants transformed gardening in the American West.