 You want to make sure if there is new growth, you don't want to cut below the new growth, but mine don't have any new growth on it yet, so just go ahead and cut those down real low. That way they will start to bush out this spring when the new growth starts coming in. No danger of going below freezing. So I just took my pots inside and I go pot them, got to clean out some of the debris that's still in there. And this pot has potting soil from last year. I usually keep the potting soil in there, oh probably a good five years before I change it out. So you can just clean all of this out and then rake the soil up really good. Stir it up. Get it nice and loose and if your potting soil has sunk down you want to make sure and refill it up a little bit just because that way your flowers show off a little bit better. So I always start with something in the center like I do a spike or you can do this king tet. It's a really nice flowery place to put in the middle. So I just start with a spike and then I always give it a little bit of a shot of like a jack's bloom or you might want to do a miracle girl or not a totally organic farmer. So I put a little sprinkle of that in there so it gives it a good start. Take it down and put it right in the middle. And the next I always kind of work from the inside out and you either want to work in odd numbers. So I like draining a lot. They bloom all year round make sure that when the bloom loses its color that you can dead hit it. That way it'll keep blooming all summer. Dig it down. Put a little shot of your little fertilizer again. Again I'm going to work with three. I also love red so I use that a lot. I just dig holes enough to cover the base of the flower so I don't do it super deep. Now that I have those planted I like to accent the colors like I like to go with red with yellow or I do an orange and I do these little Acoma Bell flower. So then I'll water these after I'm done. Put those in the middle of the two geraniums. Put them back here. Last one goes. I water these on top and you can water those in a whole tube. But some of my little plants I just water this on top. And like I said I figured that this will then bloom and when it gets big this summer it really fills up the pot really nice. I thought I would share it. I always grow pretty good onions but I'm going to try to grow bigger onions this year. So from the edge of your garden go in about two inches and make a little trench about an inch deep so you make an inch deep in the soil. And then you're going to go and plant like onion plants you can do this onion sets or you can do it from the onion bulb and I just happen to have sets. So you plant them and you're going to plant them about four inches apart. Again they're only going to be an inch deep. And then you go out about four inches and you make a trench. And then again I'm not an organic gardener so then you take a little fertilizer and you want it to be 10, 20, 10. You want the middle number to be higher and then you cover that up. And then you go and plant four inches away. I'm going to spread 10 that's four inches. You plant your onions again an inch deep in that trench. You plant those about four inches apart. Then you go and you water this and that fertilizer feeds those plants all year long. So before I always put the fertilizer right in the trench. But again I'm trying this new technique this year. So I guess if you're going to try it too we can all see if it works and we get really big onions. Again your cold weather crops can go in now. I haven't planted radishes yet but got the potatoes in. So that's a new technique for onions.