13,520 Garden Web Discussions | Perennials

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dyhgarden(7b)

I use their Plant-Tone for everything.

Cameron

    Bookmark     June 22, 2012 at 10:32PM
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Maxine(5MA)

lol...yikes, i don�t have Plant tone...where did I go wrong :)

it's all pretty much what i thought (re: my 4 fertilizers)...just wanted to hear it from the seasoned gardeners
Thanks!
Dale
ps..bear (sp?) with meâ¦.miracle grow varieties...also hype?

    Bookmark     June 23, 2012 at 3:38PM
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NHBabs(4b-5aNH)

Quite lovely! Unfortunately, D. 'Piccolo' isn't available except in Europe, from what I can find on the web.

I think I'll have to try some of the other belladonna delphiniums, however. I started some midheight delphiniums from seed a number of years ago, but they succumbed to mildew. By now I don't remember the variety.

Many of the references I found to D. elata considered it an annual. What have others found as far as elata's longevity?

    Bookmark     June 23, 2012 at 11:42AM
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wieslaw59

Delphinium elatum has NEVER bloomed in its first year for me(needs vernalization to bloom), and often rather sparsely in its second year if on hungry soil. It begins to bloom abundantly in it's third year. Besides, many references just repeat old information without checking if it is true. 10 years is not short-lived for me.

    Bookmark     June 23, 2012 at 2:46PM
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jennypat Zone 3b NW MN(Zone 3b NW MN)

Yeah Ken it's a question which is worse the problem or the solution.

This year the thugs seem to be winning, not only am I fighting CC in the front, that bed also is full of volunteer plum trees. I am thinking that later this summer I going to HAVE to dig out my perennials, redig and roundup this whole bed.....a LOT of work but....

Then in the back of the house there are the Harebells...a lovely little wildflower until it over takes your flower beds!

In the shrub hedge that separates the yard from the gravel road and in the woodland behind the house and around one side of the yard I am fighting European Buckthorn. We have 5 acres here, 1 acre is used up in a levee and pond, about 1 1/2 acres is house, lawn and gardens, the rest is woodland.....in other words lots of weeds, not only buckthorn, but greather burdock, thistle and quack grass.

Some days It feels like an impossible task! If I could dedicate my life to it, I would love it, but alas I have to work.

    Bookmark     June 23, 2012 at 11:44AM
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buyorsell888(Zone 8 Portland OR)

Round Up (Glyphosate) is far less toxic than many chemicals put on yards.

Round Up does not poison the soil nor have any residual effect.

The 2,4-D used in Weed n'Feed does....yet people poison their lawns with it and let kids and pets play on it.

    Bookmark     June 23, 2012 at 12:58PM
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erictammy

Oops. I forgot to add the photo.

    Bookmark     June 22, 2012 at 6:34PM
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erictammy

Is it really hard to ID coneflowers since a lot of them look so similar?

    Bookmark     June 22, 2012 at 11:25PM
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echinaceamaniac(7)

Look up that recent thread where everyone posted their favorite gold plants. It had tons of ideas in there.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 2:59PM
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river_crossroads z8b Central Louisiana

Good idea, echinaceamaniac. Alina, I liked both those threads and the sharp contrasts. Here you go, nydepot:

Now, what are your favorite golden foliage plants?
Your favorite black/dark red/maroon plant?

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 11:10PM
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dyhgarden(7b)

Seed-grown plants that are loved by pollinators can "change colors" because the bees and butterflies cross-pollinate and literally breed new strains.

Also, hybrids that self-sow can revert to a parent. I have orange echinacea 'Sundown' and the original plants are always true to the orange, but all of the seedlings are the standard native color of deep pink blooms with orange cones. I keep them anyway.

On my Knock-Out Roses 'Radrazz', blooms on the new growth in spring are always darker red-pink than the reblooms on the current year's growth. If I cut back the stems during the season, then that new growth produces the darker color, too.

My best guess (I'm not a rosarian) for the white edges appearing on the roses is to try pruning a few stems, keep the roses watered well and see if the new blooms are okay. Could they have experienced a weather stress?

Cameron

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 8:18AM
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on_greenthumb

So the Latin name is: Tanacetum coccineum, but they have also been known as Chrysanthemum coccineum, Pyrethrum coccineum and Pyrethrum roseum. They have been named a few times. I'll let my mum know about the dieback/self sowing/cross pollination options. I guess we'll have to see what happens. I know some of mine didn't come back, but the colours are all off the same plant (or look like it anyways).

As for the roses, that does make sense. The weather was VERY strange for the March-May timeframe. Hot then cold, then hot, then normal, then cold and right now we're having August weather. It was also the driest spring on record for us - we got less than 30% the average between February to end of May.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 5:59PM
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splitrock

I appreciate your post, rouge21, because I just planted a "Low and Behold" BB at our zone 6a cabin, and I had no idea about the hardiness issue. I did plant it with good drainage, and now I know to really mulch it heavily at Thanksgiving(and pray of course). Couldn't I just dump a bag of shredded pine bark on it(and pray)? The oak leaves blow around a lot on the mountain top where I am trying to create a beautiful, but deer resistant landscape.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2012 at 4:07PM
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eclecticcottage(6b wny)

I have a few Lo and Beholds coming into bloom now-they started showing the buds at least a week ago if not longer. My first one is JUST staring to show purple instead of green. A few others are starting to show the blooms too, but until they bloom I can't recall which ones are which. One I'm pretty sure is Bicolor and the other is black knight.

We're considered 6b here, but we're RIGHT on the lake, as in, it's my backyard, so our seasons run later (my shasta daisies are JUST now starting to bloom). I didn't have die-back on any BBs this past winter (their first winter here), and I didn't mulch them either. 14 various BB's (ruby red, black knight, bicolor and lo and behold) all made it through fine. I have one more that was a freebie (I just had to dig it up) that I don't know what it is-it was pretty rough around the edges when I got it and it never did bloom last year.

I also have about 90 others that were all bought this spring as rooted cuttings, some are more robust now than others, but all that made it (I bought 100) are handling whatever the weather does fine.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 4:02PM
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rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7

I have always grown purple oxalis in the full, blazing sun...in the South! It stays compact, in full flower, and without problems of any kind. A heavy frost will zap it into a winter's sleep where single digit temps are fairly common.

Inside, I don't know how you 'd provide enough light to keep it from becoming leggy and spider mite -y.

If the edges are burnt I would suspect a cultural problem...too much water, poor drainage, excess fertilization, etc. Sunburn would not appear just on the edges.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 12:26PM
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ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5

your ground freezes in z7??? .. wow .. never thunk it so ..????

the key here is.. they are EXTRA.. just do it ... what downside is there??? throw them away ...

let us know.. next spring.. how it works out..

presumably.. the two you keep indoors.. will have more babes to try outdoors next year ...

now.. why are you keeping two potted INDOORS for summer??? ... they should go outside.. in their pot.. in full shade.. for the summer ... until the last minute before frost or freeze comes..

you will be surprised how good it will look.. come xmas ... and the doldrums of winter ... as long as you dont forget to water it out there ...

ken

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 2:35PM
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mistascott(7A VA)

Coreopsis 'Route 66.'

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 11:45PM
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ms.cece

Thanks everyone!! I will be sure to do my research.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 7:55AM
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judon(upstate NY)

Thank you all!

Chris,
are you saying if I deadhead it, the plant will continue to bloom?

Judon

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 9:18PM
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grandmachris

Yes. down the stem at each node.

Chris

    Bookmark     June 21, 2012 at 6:43AM
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terrene(5b MA)

Tiki Torch is a hybrid of E. purpurea and E. paradoxa - since E. paradoxa is more drought tolerant, growing in a drier native habitat, I would also add extra perlite, or use more of a cactus mix or gritty mix in the pot. The Container Gardening forum has lots of threads on Tapla's (aka Al) gritty mix. He also explains concepts like the "perched water table" that exists in pots.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 8:06PM
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echinaceamaniac(7)

The gritty mix killed some Echinaceas I was growing. It dries out too quickly. I'd mix it at least half and half wirh potting soil.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 9:47PM
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kimka(Zone 6B)

From the bloom color it looks like it could be Mystic merlin M.sylvestris. Depending on if you have a warm or cold winter in zone 7, it can be a short lived perennial or a freely reseeding annual.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 9:22AM
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beccap(7)

Thanks for all the help. It is Mystic Merlin. It seems some people have trouble with it reseeding too much and others really like it. I think I will just see what happens naturally. Thanks again for all the help.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2012 at 11:14AM
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flowergirl70ks

I live in southwest Ks and have delph Bellamosa in my yard that is over 20 years old. It seeds down, and if I can save them from the rabbits, I scatter them all about several gardens on this block. Back in the 30's and 40's, my Dad grew them for a greenhouse, for funeral displays. He was Swiss and could grow anything as I remember so well, even tho I wasen't that old then. I miss him so much, especially when I have a gardening question.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2012 at 7:58PM
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mytime(3/4 Alaska)

Apparently I forgot to hit the second button to post, so I'll say it again...
Thanks for the link, Flora. I enjoyed the little video.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2012 at 9:53PM
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v1rt

This is planted east side of house. Maybe if you transplant it to the same location, it might help.

I shot this at Blue Harbor Sheboygan, at our rented villa.

    Bookmark     June 18, 2012 at 4:32PM
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Tiffany, purpleinopp GardenWeb, Z8b Opp, AL(8B AL)

Is that 2 different lavenders?

    Bookmark     June 19, 2012 at 9:10AM
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ditas

Updating on my newly created (still in progress) I fondly named *Shenandoah Country* sunny bed. I have just added a couple more pix to the album I posted above.

I'm so much more pleased now w/ my choices of Shenandoah Swichgrass & Oso Easy (Mango Salsa) roses for the outer periphery of the bed. I have decided in mid-Mar to plant 3 Hydrangeas I've successfully grown in pots (1rooted from a Kyushu branch & 2 seedling-volunteers of Tardiva). They will eventually work well as screens along the fence! I'm adding 3 *Yellow Submarine* roses behind Shenandoahs (at safe distance) around the dead stump. I'm sure it'll be crowded there oneday (sigh) but will be pretty for a few years!!!

Wonder if you might check out the added pix in the orig link I posted above ~ appreciate your thoughts!!! TIA

    Bookmark     June 16, 2012 at 5:20PM
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mori1(5b/6a)

ditas,
The turtle head (Chelone) prefer full sun. So I would leave them where they are because trying to move them will not be easy.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2012 at 12:20AM
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