Take
a Fresh Look at spring
planting
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central
Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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|
| FRESH
LOOK RED
-- Thriving
in the summer
heat and
humidity
with drought
or rainy
conditions,
Fresh Look
Red decorates
a garden
or patio
container
with rosy
red plumes. |
|

|
| FRESH
LOOK YELLOW
-- Fresh
Look Yellow
offers season-long
garden color
with minimal
care. |
|
If
you are ready for some
new garden appeal, look
no further than two of
this year's All-America
Selections winners: Fresh
Look Red and Fresh Look
Yellow celosia.
Fresh
Look Red celosia performs
like a fresh floral arrangement
all summer and for that
reason is an All-America
Selections Gold Medal
Winner.
Thriving
in the summer heat and
humidity with drought
or rainy conditions,
Fresh Look Red decorates
a garden or patio container
with rosy red plumes.
It
won the coveted Gold
Medal for its consistent
performance with minimal
maintenance and pest-free
growth. Fresh Look Red
covers up spent plumes
by producing new foliage
and blooms.
The
plant always looks fresh,
needing no grooming.
When grown in full sun,
Fresh Look Red plants
mature at 12 to 18 inches
tall and spread 12 to
20 inches. The central
plume can be 8 to 10
inches tall and 5 inches
wide.
Also
a winner, Fresh Look
Yellow offers season-long
garden color with minimal
care. The golden yellow
plumes are produced in
abundance, at times covering
the plant. The central
plume can be 9 inches
tall and 6 inches wide.
Fresh
Look Yellow grows numerous
side shoots, which cover
mature blooms, eliminating
the need for deadheading.
When grown in a full
sun garden, Fresh Look
Yellow attains a height
of about 12 to 17 inches
and spreads 12 to 15
inches. Plants exhibit
heat-, humidity- and
severe weather-tolerance.
Originating
in the tropics, the celosia
produces flowers from
summer through fall.
Its ability to withstand
drought and extremely
hot temperatures should
win it a Mississippi
Medallion Award, a Georgia
Gold Medal and every
other honor in the South.
When
the intense heat of summer
has us fleeing to the
air conditioner, landscapes
can still sizzle with
color with celosias like
the Fresh Look series.
A valuable source of
color when summer has
flowers looking tired,
the celosia is also a
popular cut flower and
is perfect for drying
or using in floral arrangements.
If
drying for winter arrangements,
be sure to harvest before
seed-set. Then strip
foliage and hang upside-down
in a cool, dark, well-ventilated
area.
As
with many flowers, the
key ingredient to great
performance is good soil
drainage. Wet, soggy
soil is lethal to celosia,
so amend as needed.
Select
healthy, growing transplants
with few buds showing,
or plant seeds in warm
soil. Prior to planting,
prepare the bed area
with 2 pounds per 100
square feet of a slow-release,
12-6-6 fertilizer with
minor nutrients. Space
plants 10 to 15 inches
apart.
Spot-planting
does not do this plant
justice. Mass plant at
least nine -- 15 would
be better -- in an informal
drift for the most effective
landscape display. Plant
them in combination with
other drought-tolerant
flowers with similar
water requirements.
Don't
be afraid to mix with
flowers of different
colors -- the result
will dazzle you. The
colorful, plume-like
flowers are showiest
with a backdrop of green
shrubbery.
It
will not be long until
spring is here, and I
do hope you will try
Fresh Look Red and Fresh
Look Yellow in your landscape
this spring.
-30-
Released:
February 5, 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 examine
older columns carefully
for any information that
could be time sensitive.
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200 d.p.i. -- Red | Yellow |