Plant Joseph's
Coats for
enduring beauty
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
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The
bright green Joseph's Coat combines wonderfully
with caladiums, giving a season-long show of
color.
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My choice
as the poster child for tough and beautiful plants is the
small tropical plant Joseph's Coat, which livens up
landscapes with its richly colored foliage.
From
late spring until frost, Joseph's Coat performs admirably in
the garden, making it a favorite of home horticulturists and
commercial landscapers. In fertile well-drained soil, it is
a problem-free plant.
Joseph's
Coats, known botanically as Alternanthera ficoidia, are
native to Mexico and Brazil and are related to celosia and
gomphrena. They thrive in full sun with fertile, loamy,
well-drained soil. If this doesn't describe your soil, add 3
to 4 inches of organic matter and till to a depth of 8 to 10
inches.
While
tilling, incorporate two pounds of a slow-release 12-6-6
fertilizer with micronutrients for each 100 square feet of
bed space. Set out nursery grown transplants 6 to 10-inches
apart in late spring.
Joseph's
Coat is easy to grow and looks its best if kept sheared to
keep low growing and compact. These troopers are in the
ground a long time performing a valuable task, so water them
during periods of drought and feed with a light application
of the fertilizer three times during the summer and early
fall.
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Joseph's
Coats combine well in this tropical-looking garden.
The companion plants are coleus, cannas and
impatiens.
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You may
very well be thinking if you did not plant these this spring
that you will have to wait. You may not! Many garden centers
offer large, high quality plants this time of the year. This
will give you weeks of brilliant color.
In my
mind, they are superb in the tropical style garden. Try
growing in a tropical bed with bananas, elephant ears,
cannas, impatiens and coleus. Interesting combinations can
be created with caladiums.
By all
means, try combining with the different varieties of
Joseph's Coats. As a student, I looked forward each year to
seeing Texas A&M spelled out in Joseph's Coats on the
campus in College Station, Texas. The letters were spelled
out in a maroon-leafed variety while the background was
composed of a lime green selection. Whether you want to
spell something like the family name or create an artistic
design, Joseph's Coat is among the best. The choices of
companions are endless.
Often
the Joseph's Coat is sold generically, but Filigree,
Magnifica, Parrot Feather, Tricolor and Versicolor are a few
of the leading selections.
Look
also for the Purple Knight, a selection of A. dentata. You
may not find this one until next spring, but it is
incredible. In fact I would recommend it as an award
winner.
Purple
Knight was supposed to get around 18 inches in height. In my
garden it has reached 36 inches and spreads with abandon. It
has no problems and the deep, dark purple leaves are
produced nonstop in high heat and humidity. You will want to
place it to the middle of the flower border. Try growing
with rudbeckias or New Gold lantana.
Joseph's
Coats are easy to root by cutting. Strip the leaves from the
bottom of a 6-inch cutting and place in moist sand or peat
with at least one set of leaves above the soil.
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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. Released: Sept. 2, 2002
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