By
Crystel Bailey MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi gardeners and landscapers no longer
have to travel several states away to see which new flowers
will qualify as the best varieties, now that Poplarville is
named an All-America Selection trial ground site. In
August, the All-America Selection board of directors voted
the Poplarville display garden at the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station's Coastal
Research and Extension Center to be an All-America Selection
trial ground for flowering plants. It is the only such
garden between Georgia and Texas. "It's a
very prestigious honor in horticulture because there is only
a limited number of sites and the awarding of those sites
are based on the previous success as an evaluation site,"
said Patricia Knight, MAFES horticulture expert. All-America
Selection, the oldest international testing organization in
North America, was started in 1932 as a way to improve
flower varieties at trial grounds and display them to the
public at display gardens in places such as shopping malls,
colleges and state fairgrounds. Before
being named an All-America Selection trial ground, the
display garden in Poplarville met several requirements. It
was a display garden for at least two years and was
maintained by the person who applied for this honor, which
was Knight. In addition, Poplarville's trial ground had
access to a greenhouse and irrigation, contained space for
growing All-America award winners and was located in a
public place. "Having
this designation is an asset for horticulture growers.
Herbaceous producers and landscapers in Mississippi benefit
because they can see new varieties before they are on the
market without having to travel to Georgia or Texas," Knight
said. Besides
local convenience, another benefit of having an All- America
Selection garden in Mississippi is to gain accurate
knowledge of how plants will respond to the
climate. "We can
see how flowers perform in our climate instead of another
climate, so we have a more accurate understanding of what to
expect," Knight said. This
past summer, Knight grew vincas, coleus, petunias,
sunflowers, and basil and plans to grow vincas, celosia,
zinnias, impatiens, begonias and assorted perennials in
2001. "We
decide what to grow based on markets, availability of plant
material and what is entered in All-America Selection
trials," Knight said. Each
garden is expected to grow and maintain 25 to 35 varieties
of All-America Selection award winners. Winners are chosen
on a point scale from 0 to 5. Gold Medal Awards for plants
scoring 4 or 5 are given out only once or twice each
decade. Plants
are judged on color, disease resistance, insect and weather
stress, prolonged flowering, attractiveness of blossoms,
uniformity, uniqueness, fragrance, and flower form and
quality. Released:
Nov. 27, 2000 Contact:
Dr. Patricia Knight, (601) 795-4525
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:34
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