Bring back
old-fashioned cosmos
in modern garden
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
An
old-fashioned plant at the New Orleans Botanical Garden
recently just blew me away with its beauty. It was an old
cosmos variety called Sensation. Cosmos are native to Mexico
and related to coreopsis and rudbeckias.
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The
beautiful, daisy-like flowers and airy fern-like
foliage of the cosmos make it an ideal plant for
the cottage garden. They are easy to grow from
transplants or seeds. Plant now for late summer and
fall color.
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Gardeners
need to take a stand and bring back several cosmos
varieties. If you are thinking of the orange cosmos, you
need to think again because I am predominantly referring to
the Cosmos bipinnatus. These have daisy-like flowers that
are 2 to 4 inches wide in shades of burgundy, pink, lilac
and white with orange centers. They are borne on stems of
airy fern-like foliage for weeks on end during the growing
season.
These
cosmos are easy to grow from transplants and seed. In fact,
they are so easy to grow from seed, you should sow
succession plantings to have blooms the entire growing
season. They are a superior flower for cutting and
displaying in a vase.
You
still may find them at garden centers as transplants, but
check the seed racks, too. Researchers have grown them in
past years for the Fall Flower and Garden Fest in Crystal
Springs.
Plant
seeds or nursery-grown transplants in loose, well-drained
planting beds. Fertility need not be high. Seeds germinate
in five to seven days with flowers, and you are cutting
bouquets in eight to 10 weeks. Thin the seedlings or space
transplants 12 to 36 inches apart depending on your variety.
Deadheading
old flowers keeps those gorgeous blooms coming. Fertility
need not be high; in fact, keep nitrogen levels on the low
side or plants will produce too much foliage and top growth
at the expense of the flowers. The cosmos also gives a
perennial-like performance by reseeding, but the resulting
flowers may be different from the parent. In other words,
you may plant a dwarf selection and the resulting volunteer
seedling look like a taller variety. Water sparingly, but
water deeply when you do to train roots to go deep.
Considering
the cosmos plants grow from 2 to 4 feet suggests planting to
the back of the border. I would suggest using them in a
cottage garden setting against a white picket fence. The
tallest varieties may need a garden wire to help hold them
up or better yet, use salvias like Victoria Blue, Indigo
Spires, the large blue anise or Brazilian sage to give the
support. The spiky flowers of the salvias will combine
perfectly with the more rounded cosmos. Another good
companion is the cleome.
Those
of you have not yet ventured into tall plants for the garden
will want to go with the Sonata series. This is a
Flueroselect Award Winner and is probably the most popular.
These are dwarf 2-foot tall plants in four colors and a mix.
The
Psyche series is an old favorite with large 4-inch,
semi-double blooms on 4- to 5-foot tall plants. Sensation,
the one I saw at the New Orleans Botanical Garden, is an
All-America Selections Winner from 1938 and is still
impressive in display gardens throughout the South. Let this
be a lesson in that when a plant is an award winner, such as
an All-America Selections or Mississippi Medallion, you can
count on them for years to come.
Seashells,
Early Wonder and Versailles also are worthy varieties if you
find them in packets or transplants.
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Released:
July 1, 2002
Contact: Norman Winter
(601)
857-2284 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.
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