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| The
Matrix series of pansies are large-flowered with 12
colors and four mixes available. They come with blotches
and clear-faced, and with this many varieties, are
sure to have a color to suit any palette. |
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New
pansies show
up at garden centers
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
Judging
from those attending this year’s Fall Flower and
Garden Fest, pansy planting season is here, and there are
some terrific new selections to pick from.
I
enjoyed watching people shop at the festival in Crystal
Springs. In one area, tropicals were selling like there was
no tomorrow, and in another area it was pansies and
snapdragons. It was good to see people paying attention to
the landscape again.
Two
new pansies that were very popular were the Ultima Radiance
Blue and the Matrix series. I have always loved the Ultimas
because of their unique color combinations. You may remember
the All-America Selections Ultima Morpho from a couple of
years ago. The Ultima Radiance Blue is richly colored with
blue-cream and yellow in an unusual pattern. If you plant
some of these, I promise they will catch the eye of visitors
to your home.
The
Matrix series made its debut this year. It is a
large-flowered pansy with 12 colors and four mixes. They
come with blotches and clear-faced, too. With this many
varieties, you have to know there is a color that will suit
your palette.
These
two I have mentioned are just a few of the new selections
available. There are so many at your local garden center
that it is easy to see why pansies (and their cousins, the
violas) are the premier cool-season flowers.
No
matter what pansy you choose, bed preparation is crucial.
The ground stays wet many winters, almost never drying out.
For this reason, you must work organic matter into the soil
to allow maximum aeration and drainage.
In
trials a couple of years ago at the Truck Crops Experiment
Station in Crystal Springs, you could stand several feet
away from a plot and pick out where peat had been used as
the source for organic matter. It simply allowed the flowers
to perform better. In places where no organic matter had
been incorporated, the flowers literally drowned. So do a
good job in bed preparation before you go shopping.
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| 
|
| The
Ultima series of pansies have unique color combinations
that catch the eye of visitors. The Ultima Radiance
Blue is richly colored with blue-cream and yellow
in an unusual pattern. |
|
When
planting pansies and violas, be aggressive and mass-plant
them in large quantities. As part of my lecture, when I show
a photo of a beautiful garden loaded with flowers, I tell
them you can’t get this look from a jumbo
six-pack.
When
planting, interplant with spring bulbs like tulips and
daffodils. Use smaller jonquils with violas, or Johnny
Jump-Ups and larger daffodils like King Alfred with the new
super-sized pansies.
As
you shop, I urge you to keep your eyes open for Purple Rain.
This variety is still so popular that demand usually
outpaces supply. Purple Rain is a mounding, cascading pansy
that is perfect as a border plant in the landscape. It also
is ideally suited to baskets, planters and window
boxes.
The
coloring -- dark-purple with hints of blue in the center --
makes Purple Rain an attractive choice for gardeners. In
beds I have seen, this pansy reaches heights of 12 to 18
inches without a leggy look. They almost look like a small
pansy hedge.
No
matter which pansy you choose or whether you plan to use
them in the landscape, porch, patio or deck, combine them
with other flowers like snapdragons, Dianthus, or flowering
kale and cabbage. The yellow, orange and apricot colors are
terrific with Red Giant mustard.
Get
out a notepad and add up the number of days of cool-season
color you will have if you plant this weekend and pull them
in late April. I’ll let you do the math, but you will
see that it adds up to one of the best plant-buys you can
make.
-30-
Released:
October 20, 2005
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.
Publications
may download photographs at 200 dpi: Matrix
Citrus
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Blue
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