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| I have seen these zinnias and would like to know what kind they are since they appear to only have a single layer of petals. Also, I have never seen a zinnia that has such a raised center. Is that common or is that there because all the petals have fallen off? Thank you for your help |
Follow-Up Postings:
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Hi, Pupper,
I have been working on several other zinnia flowerforms, but so far none that are single. I have seen some daisy-like zinnias that were rather attractive. But I haven't seen any like the one in your picture. You might want to save seeds from it. It could be quite a novelty, especially if you developed a whole strain of them in a variety of colors, and their plants were covered in blooms. You could work toward that goal by growing a lot of seeds from it and crossing some of them with other "normal" zinnias that had different colors, and saving seeds from those crosses. |
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| thank you zenman for your informative reply. your tubular petaled zinnia is gorgeous and unique. |
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- Posted by Denver_Designer 5 (My Page) on Sat, Sep 14, 13 at 9:59
| Your orange zinnia looks like some that came up when I planted Botanical Interests' Fireball Blend zinnia seeds. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Zinnias aren't just for little old ladies anymore
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| Hi, Denver_Designer, Your blog link had a picture captioned "This isn’t your typical grandmother’s flower" that shows a nice single red zinnia and a nice red tubular petaled zinnia in the background. That kind of bowled me over, because I have been working with tubular zinnias as a relatively rare zinnia form. Maybe they aren't as rare as I thought. However, that is consistent with my theory that tubular petaled zinnias are an unknown existing zinnia strain that survives "under the radar" in zinnia seed fields. ZM |
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- Posted by Denver_Designer 5 (My Page) on Mon, Sep 16, 13 at 13:32
| After I read your Sept. 14 message, ZM, I went out and studied the red background zinnia more closely. Indeed, it is a tubular, with petals folding inward. |
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