Hybrid pink
dianthus offers
new toughness
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AWESOME
COMBINATION -- Bouquet Purple dianthus is the
perfect companion to petunias, Dusty Miller and
Sweet Alyssum.
SPRING
COLOR -- (inset) Bouquet Purple dianthus is at home
in this spring garden with anise hyssop and
periwinkles. |
By Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
As you
shop for daffodils and pansies, pick up a flat or two of
dianthus. The new hybrid pink dianthus offers months of
cool-season color for the landscape. They would be a worthy
purchase even if they are annuals, but many gardeners find
these newer varieties will give three, four or more seasons
of bloom.
These
are tough, cold-tolerant plants that will endure our summer
heat and humidity with good soil preparation and a layer of
mulch. In recent years, several have been recognized as
exceptionally good performers in trial in Mississippi,
Louisiana, Georgia and Florida.
These
delightful plants give outstanding color in red, pink, white
and every blend of the three. In addition to their cheerful
colors, they also have an enticing fragrance.
Hybrid
pinks prefer well-drained, well-worked beds rich in organic
matter. When preparing a bed, incorporate two pounds of a
slow-release, 12-6-6-fertilizer with minor nutrients per 100
square feet of bed space. Give plenty of sun to enable them
to bloom to their potential. Plant at the same depth they
are growing in the container in the fall or spring, spacing
plants 6 to 8 inches apart.
Lightly
side-dress with fertilizer once a month to keep them growing
and producing. Keep your hybrid pinks mulched to conserve
moisture, deter weed growth and give added cold protection.
Mulch also keeps summer soil temperatures cooler, increasing
your chances of keeping them around for multiple years.
Deadhead old blossoms to keep the plant looking tidy and the
flower stems coming.
Dianthus
colors allow for partnering with cool season crops like
pansies, violas, snapdragons, and flowering kale or cabbage.
Try growing taller selections behind Purple Rain pansy or
True Blue Panola. They also offer the opportunity to combine
with spring flowering daisies or coreopsis.
If you
are interested in growing patriotic colors, try red and
white varieties with plants like blue lobelia. Use also with
Dusty Miller, early spring petunias and alyssum.
The
Dianthus chinensis, though great for cool season, didn't
have the new toughness identified in the hybrid known as
Dianthus chinensis x barbatus. This group is represented by
plants like the Telestar series that was chosen as a
Louisiana Select award winner, and the Ideal series that has
proven the best in University of Georgia trials. Ideal
Carmine and Ideal Rose were chosen as Flueroselect Quality
Mark winners and Ideal Violet, an All-America Selections
award winner. The Melody series offers several choices, and
the Melody Pink was chosen as an All-America Selections
winner.
Those
known as Dianthus barbatus interspecific hybrids are also
exceptionally tough. Last year, Bouquet Purple dianthus was
chosen as a Mississippi Medallion award winner and the
Minnesota Select Perennial Plant of the Year.
A new
selection, known as Amazon Neon Duo, is even taller than
Bouquet Purple and has been terrific in Florida trials. Like
Bouquet Purple the Amazon Neon Duo offers opportunities for
cut flowers. The reason for the duo name is that the flowers
are a 50:50 mixture of cherry and purple. This one looks to
have award winner written all over it.
Regardless,
if you haven't tried dianthus in several years, the new
hybrids may surprise you with their color, cold hardiness
and residual vigor in subsequent years.
-30-
Released:
Oct. 28, 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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