Garden Centre
Monday, August 13, 2007
Dahlias
1 – a friend who recreates old recipes is trying to make dahlia flour – yes, flour, not flower! The first dahlia tubers arrived here late in the eighteenth century, from Mexico and were viewed as vegetables rather than flowers. So she’s been drying, grinding and baking dahlia tubers as part of her research project and I’ve been steadfastly refusing to eat anything she produces. By 1815, the Belgians had produced double dahlia flowers and the plant had become a herbaceous rather than vegetable border resident. By Victoria’s reign, thousands of varieties of dahlia had been created.
2 – I’m reviewing the novel Black Dahlia, for a magazine. Not the best bedtime reading, unless you like going to sleep with dismembered women on your mind. That, of course, led to finding a copy of the 1946 film, The Blue Dahlia, because it was possible that the victim Elizabeth Short, who became known as the Black Dahlia, got her name after the film was released. And that, in turn, led to a quick peruse of Red Dahlia, a book based on the case of the Black Dahlia but updated as a kind of copycat case. Phew!
3 – and the garden is full of … yes, you’ve guessed – dahlias! They are a late summer showstopper and will thrive in almost any location and in almost any soil, but for really good flowers dahlia roots need a sunny location – this means at least a half-day of sun every day, more is better, and you need to shelter them from wind. Even so you’ll end up staking them because they are surface feeders with a mat of light surface roots which means the plant can easily blown over by even moderate wind – and even if they don’t get blown down, breezes break the roots and stop the plant feeding.
For big blooms you also need to remove the two little buds either side of the main bud (called the crown bud) and remove the side buds/shoots at the next lower pair of leafs and again at the next lower pair. This will force the plant to concentrate all its energy into the remaining crown bud which gives you a whopper flower.
Finally, once the first heavy frost blackens their leaves, you need to dig up the tubers and set them upside down in a dry airy space for about two weeks to drain moisture from the remaining stem(s). After that, store the tubers in trays of dry sand or peat moss in a cool, dry cellar or storage area – don’t let them desiccate or they won’t flower next year.
Labels: dahlia, garden flowers, garden research
The All Seasons Gardener at 9:49 AM 1 Comments
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Sunshine at last ...
The holly is in berry, the rowans too, and some trees appear to be readying themselves for the change in colour associated with autumn? What’s going on? Wildlife expert Trevor Beer suggests the early arrival of the various fruits is due to the intense rain in July, which may have fooled the plants into thinking autumn has arrived early so they have begun to fruit for fear of missing the season.
Alternatively the early and warm spring may have pushed certain plants into an early autumn as their growing season is measured by weeks, not weather conditions.
Down in Devon, at the Royal Horticultural Society gardens, the ornamental acer trees have already started going through the autumnal colours usually associated with later in the year.
While weather experts insist that such localised and recent changes cannot be put down to global warming or climate change – because they don’t add up to enough of a trend yet to be measured - it is clear that weather extremes like these, and hurricanes, and flooding, and winters that aren’t cold enough to kill off garden pests, will all become a more regular occurrence.
This means the kind of container gardening shown in the picture may become more prevalent, as we learn to cope with the unexpected. Even so, this August you can expect to see the Dahlias come into their own – they are the princesses of late summer and along with other members of the daisy family such as the rudbeckias and heleniums they offer a riot of colour and form for otherwise rather tired looking borders. If you want something more permanent, the later blooming varieties of ceanothus give an azure bloom to the garden now, and hardy hibiscus are in full flower in shades of magenta and pink.
Labels: ceonothus, dahlia, garden flowers, garden news, garden pests, hibiscus, rudbeckia
The All Seasons Gardener at 7:04 AM 0 Comments
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