Port Gibson
Pink's beauty rivals
that of namesake city
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
One of
the most beautiful cities in the South is Port Gibson, Miss.
Labeled "too beautiful to burn" by Civil War Gen. Ulysses S.
Grant, this town indeed has persevered and entices travelers
to wander the streets in awe.
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Port
Gibson Pink verbenas are reminiscent of
apple blossoms in color and offer a
delightful morning fragrance. Swallowtail
butterflies love to feast on their
nectar.
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The
Mississippi Plant Selections Committee is proud to announce
the Port Gibson Pink verbena as a 2004 Mississippi Medallion
award winner.
Just
like the city it is named after, this verbena will be around
in your garden for years to come. In fact, Port Gibson was
planted in the first year of our Mississippi Medallion
trials eight years ago and is still there today.
Port
Gibson Pink verbenas are reminiscent of apple blossoms in
color and offer a delightful morning fragrance. You'll find
them to be a favorite of swallowtail butterflies that feast
on their nectar.
Port
Gibson Pink is a vigorous, upright yet spreading verbena
that blooms for months. Proper soil preparation and site
selection is essential in your verbena success. Add 3 to 4
inches of organic matter and till to a depth of 8 to 10
inches. Port Gibson Pink verbenas need full sun in moist,
well-drained soil that does not stay consistently wet. In
fact the better drainage they have in the winter, the longer
they will live.
While
tilling, spread 2 pounds per 100 square feet of a
slow-release fertilizer like a 12-6-6, 8-8-8 or something
fairly similar.
Provide
full sunlight, water and you are well on your way to
enjoying one of the prettiest flowers available. Like all
perennial verbenas, these are vigorous plants that spread
exceptionally well. They bloom for weeks and weeks, and then
get a little tired. Although they'll still have a few
blossoms, they'll look a little weak.
This is
the time to cut them back and side-dress with a little
fertilizer. The verbenas will send out new runners and give
more blooms. You may need to do this twice in a long growing
season, but that is how you have verbena blooms in spring,
summer and fall. Leaving those long stems will promote
problems and make them look unsightly.
Port
Gibson Pink verbenas are resistant to powdery mildew and are
very vigorous. They will excel in landscapes, and they are
perfect for baskets, patios, window boxes and balconies.
Fertilize once a month for those planted in the landscape
and every two weeks for those in containers.
You
will find that like their cousin the lantana, swallowtail,
monarch and fritillary butterflies will feast on the
perennial verbena regularly. Combine them with plants like
salvia, buddleia and lantanas.
Port
Gibson Pink verbena makes a nice companion with a previous
winner, the Biloxi Blue verbena. Try them in front of
purple-foliaged plants like Purple Heart, Mississippi Summer
Sun Coleus or the highly ornamental Purple
Ruffles.
Stop
for a visit in the friendly city of Port Gibson and then
look for the Mississippi Medallion award winning Port Gibson
Pink verbena at your local garden center.
The
Mississippi Medallion program is in its eighth year and is
sponsored by Mississippi State University Extension Service,
Mississippi Nursery and Landscape Association and
Mississippi Plant Selections Committee.
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Released:
April 1, 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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