By
Norman Winter The air
was so hot and muggy that I could hardly breathe, and trying
to look dapper, I found myself glistening (sweating)
profusely. But there they were Dancing Girls performing to
the utmost in a climate that seems so extreme this
summer. Who are
these Dancing Girls you might ask? The Dancing Girls, also
known as Dancing Ladies, are one of the most beautiful and
overlooked gingers we can grow. Botanically speaking, the
Globba marantina are native to Southeast Asia. Those of you
familiar with the plant may have gotten used to its old
botanical name, Globba schomburgkii. But like many other
plants, the name has been changed to keep you on your
toes. My
fancy, high-priced reference books, say they are a zone 9
plant. While they do grow well and naturalize there with
ease, I have seen them return in Yazoo City and lower zone 7
regions. There they go dormant in the winter to return in
the spring. This species not only returns in the spring, but
it has loads of little plants called bulbils for further use
around the landscape. The
Dancing Girl gets about 24 to 30 inches tall and each stalk
produces a bright yellow cluster of flowers hanging down 6
to 8 inches that keeps blooming into fall. The blooms are
best described as pendulous racemes of green bracts with
bright yellow flowers. The
foliage is handsome and tropical-looking. The Dancing Girl,
like most gingers, does best in the filtered light of tall
trees or early morning sun followed by shade. Prepare the
bed with lots of organic matter to encourage a larger, more
vigorous plant. Those grown in tight clay live, but seem
diminished in size of plant and bloom. The
Dancing Girl combines nicely with other gingers, upright
elephant ears, bananas and philodendrons for a lush look.
Lilac- colored impatiens planted to the sides or rear also
looksharp. Dancing
Girls and other gingers need plenty of moisture and
fertilizer to keep them growing vigorously. Feed in early
spring just prior to shoot emergence and again in mid-summer
with a slow-release 2-1-2 ratio (10-5-10) fertilizer with
minor nutrients or balanced (8- 8-8) with minor nutrients.
Don't let it touch the stalks. Remove frost bitten stalks
and add a good layer of mulch to assist in winter
protection. Divide clumps every three to five years as
needed. The
Dancing Girls aren't the only Globba species worth trying.
The Globba Wintii, called mauve Dancing Girl, produces
knockout burgundy-colored bracts with yellow flowers. Globba
arosanguinea has bright red bracts with yellow flowers. Both
grow well in South Mississippi. The
Dancing Girls aren't the only gingers strutting their stuff
right now. The scarlet ginger (Hedychium coccineum),
butterfly ginger (Hedychium coronarium), hidden ginger
(Curcuma petilolata) and pine cone ginger (Zingiber
zerumbet) are all blooming within a few miles of my
computer. All are
little known by the general gardening public because they
haven't tried them and they are sometimes a challenge to
find. If you aren't growing these plants, remember that many
gardeners in other states would give just about anything to
grow gingers like we can in Mississippi. Our
summers do resemble the old movies where gold seekers are
trekking through a steamy jungle, carving out a path with a
machete, sweat pouring off their bodies as every insect
known to man attempts to devour them. But gingers like the
Dancing Girls make them much more bearable. Released:
July 31, 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
Dancing Girls
Perform Easily In Mississippi
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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