True Blue, Peach Frost have electrifying color
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
The wind chill of 39 degrees this morning told me I better
start getting ready to plant pansies and violas. As usual, I find
myself a little behind in bed preparation. I need to tidy up the area
where lantanas and verbenas have run rampant.
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| Peach
Frost violas from the Sorbet series offer a wide range
of colors beginning with blue and moving toward a
center of creamy yellow with a splash of hot orange.
They are spectacular in this bed with True Blue Panolas. |
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Splendid
violas offer attention-grabbing color with a deep
blue and a splash of yellow. Their enticing fragrance
encourages people to “stop and smell the violas.” |
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In 2000, the Panola was a Mississippi Medallion award
winner, and there were just a handful of colors that first year. This
fall, there are 22 colors and nine mixes. One of the most sought-after
no doubt will be the True Blue Panola.
There are so many pansies on the market that at the California
Pack Trials, nursery owners and growers almost yawned as they walked
through the display. I am exaggerating a little, but it takes an extra
special variety to get someone to take a photograph. However, nearly
all stopped for a picture of the new and improved True Blue Panola
with its almost iridescent, electrifying blue flowers.
Let me remind you what is so good about the Panola series. I can sum
it up in one word: longevity. The Panola is a medium-sized pansy with
genetics from both sides of the family, violas and pansies. Not only
does it put up a lot of flowers, but also it has shown remarkable
heat tolerance. So as you head into spring and should be planting
warm-season flowers, the Panola will still be looking good.
In addition to the True Blue Panola, a couple of violas
captured their share of photographs. Peach Frost in the Sorbet series
are almost indescribable in color. First, you will find a healthy
dose of the same blue as the True Blue Panola, but moving toward the
center of the flower is a creamy yellow with a splash of hot orange.
One of the hallmarks of the Sorbet series is a wide range of colors
and blends.
The
other attention-grabbing viola was the Splendid Blue and Yellow.
The Splendid series only comes in three colors but the Blue and
Yellow alone are enough to bring pleasure to any cool-season landscape.
It offers similar colors to the Peach Frost. Both Splendid and Peach
Frost have an enticing fragrance, so get some for containers near
an entryway so you can “stop
and smell the violas.”
Choose a site with plenty of sun, work in some peat to
make your beds fertile and well drained. Add a layer of mulch after
planting, and you will have a cool-season landscape that will look
good for months. Do remember that as cold fronts come in and often
have a drying effect these beautiful flowers will need to be watered.
When
shopping at a local garden center, don’t fret if any of these specific
varieties aren’t there. There are so many choices you are bound
to find a suitable substitute. On the other hand, keep your eyes peeled
because I know they are around.
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Released:
October 27, 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: Peach
Frost | Splendid
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