Put Rajun Cajun
on 2004 wish list
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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In
the first year the Rajun Cajun gets
established nicely and for most of the
summer sends up shooting star-like stalks
topped with brilliant red blossoms. By the
third year the clump has enlarged
considerably, yielding dozens of flower
stalks at once.
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The Rajun Cajun ruellia really impressed me last summer and
makes it high on my list for the landscape in 2004. I have
grown this fiery red flower before but as usual, it is other
gardeners' applications or companions that really cause my
excitement.
Rajun
Cajun is known botanically as Ruellia elegans and was known
for years as elegant ruellia. It was in need of a marketing
name and obviously someone from our neighbor state did just
that. When this little red ruellia first showed up in the
marketplace, everyone assumed it was not cold-hardy here. We
were certainly wrong -- Rajun Cajun handles both cold and
hot weather like a champ.
The big
mistake was judging by its first-year performance. Gardeners
everywhere are guilty of such quick judgments on a variety
of plants. If we can keep the "three year" rule in mind, we
all will be better horticulturists.
In the
first year the Rajun Cajun gets established nicely and for
most of the summer sends up shooting star-like stalks topped
with brilliant red blossoms. The problem is there aren't
very many flowers in the first year. By the third year the
clump has enlarged considerably, yielding dozens of flower
stalks at once.
If you
think you've heard of ruellia before, you're probably
thinking of the purple or pink Mexican petunia. This ruellia
has become a staple in the Southern garden and is on the
slightly aggressive side.
Ruellias
actually are not related to petunias at all. Petunias are in
the family solanaceae, making them related to tomatoes,
peppers and eggplants, while the Ruellia is in the
acanthaceae family with members like the thunbergia, or
black-eyed Susan vine. Ruellias as a group are plants that
make everyone look like they have garnered the green
thumb.
Ruellias
like the Rajun Cajun grow best in full sun, but I have seen
some remarkable plantings in Georgia that received quite a
bit of shade and still bloomed profusely. They thrive in
moist, well-drained, organic-rich soils but perform well in
poorer soils, too. Highly rich soils tend to offer the ideal
habitat for aggressive spreading of ruellias, but the Rajun
Cajun is more mannered so far.
The
dark-green foliage and red flowers offer some unique
companion-planting opportunities. One combination that
caught my imagination this past summer was with Escapade
Blue plumbago. The sky blue of the plumbago and the red of
the ruellia almost looked patriotic.
The
combination planting that I liked even better was with a
gold variegated duranta. This glossy gold and green duranta,
also called pigeon berry, is about as new in the market as
the Rajun Cajun. All I can say is that you would have to see
it to believe its beauty.
Besides
being an asset in the perennial border, ruellias definitely
shine when planted as an accent or in mass. They are also
easy to propagate -- divide clumps, take root cuttings or
plant by seed. Stems are easy to root in moist soil or sand.
Another big plus is that they are disease- and pest-free
unless I coax a butterfly's offspring to munch on
one.
The
Rajun Cajun will be for sale this spring. Be sure to put it
on your wish list. You'll be glad you did.
-30-
Released:
January 22, 2004
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
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