By
Norman Winter 2000 has
been declared the year of the zinnia, but we beat the
National Garden Bureau to the punch. Zinnias were the queen
of the show at the Fall Flower and Garden Fest held last
October at the Truck Crops Branch Experiment Station in
Crystal Springs. As part
of the field day, we grew about 16 varieties of zinnias
(zinnia elegans). A large portion of our planted trials was
called the Benary Giant Series of tall plants with large
flowers. They definitely caught every visitor's
eye. I told
Benary seed representatives in California last April how
much Southerners love zinnias but that foliar diseases put a
damper on them. I suspected a sales scam when they said
their series was superior. They recommended their Benary
Giant with 4-inch flowers and the Oklahoma series with
blooms in the 2-inch range. They
sent seeds for trials and those of you who visited the
Experiment Station had the opportunity to see them
firsthand. I didn't realize until recently that the
Association of Specialty Cut Flower Growers recognized the
Benary Giant Series as the 1999 Fresh Cut Flower of the Year
award winner. There
are few, if any, field-grown, cut-flowers produced in
Mississippi. A few here, some roses there, but little else.
Cut flowers require not only a market but also little things
like post-harvest physiology ñ in other words,
handling, cooling, shipping and storage. The
zinnias we seeded in June and transplanted into the field on
July 13 were blooming to beat the band by mid-August. I
started having heart palpitations figuring they would be
long gone by the mid-October Fall Flower and Garden
Fest. It was
awesome to see these midsummer planted zinnias still looking
strong for the field day and producing flower after flower
for more than 75 days. We were growing them for show, not
for cut flowers, and we did deadhead them to keep them
producing. By
watching gardeners at the field day, you could tell that red
is still a much-loved color. The varieties Crimson Monarch
and Scarlet Flame were photographed like they were movie
stars. These two varieties reached about 39 inches in height
and had flowers 4-inches wide. Purple
lovers found Dream and Purple Prince with flowers reaching
4-inches exciting. White Weips with its 2-inch flowers was
considered among the best for the sheer number of pristine
white flowers. The
foliar disease pressure was light even though we planted
them much too close together, which is a common mistake in
the home landscape. These large zinnias need plenty of
spacing ñ 24 to 36 inches is preferable. Properly
handled zinnias will last a week in the vase. Cut your
flower stem just above a pair of leaves and within days two
new stems with flower buds will take its place. Cut in the
early morning, selecting blooms that haven't fully opened;
they will continue to open indoors. When you are cutting in
the garden, take a bucket of water with you and place the
stems in it as you cut. It would
be easy for a cut flower farmer to get these varieties, but
it is a different story as a homeowner. They are sold in
seed packs as Giant Dahlia Blue Point Zinnias and probably
other names, too. The main emphasis should be on how good
these zinnias are as a midsummer and even late summer crop
for the landscape or for cut flowers. Even if
you do not want flowers for cutting, these tall varieties
are well suited to the back of the border. If you want
shorter varieties but with the large flowers, then by all
means try the Dreamland series. Don't forget the Mississippi
Medallion winning narrow-leaf zinnias, or zinnia
angustifolia. Other states have followed suit, making this
the plant of choice in promotion programs. It is
not time to plant, but time to prepare soil and plan this
year's flower garden. Visit your garden center to look at
their seed displays and find out what will be available as
transplants. Released:
Feb. 28, 2000 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Zinnias Reign
Supreme In Mississippi Gardens
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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