MSU workmark -  OAC Link to the MSU Web site. Link to OAC Web site.

Dianthus offers great cool-season options

By Norman Winter

MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center

It seems like only yesterday that midday temperatures were reaching the century mark, and it was hard not to break a sweat, even on morning walks. Now, as the bright, crisp mornings greet us, we are reminded that cool-season planting time is upon us.

Use pumpkins as accessories in the middle of bold drifts of orange or almost-black flowers. The midsized pansy called Halloween II is virtually black and would make an excellent partner with Pansy Panola Deep Orange. Links to image at 200 dpi
Telstar Purple Picotee dianthus and Symphony Burgundy Picotee petunia compose a beautiful monochromatic spring garden.

You may have already started with mums and even begun buying some daffodils, but as October gets under way, I would like you to consider the dianthus. Today’s dianthus is a far cry from what we had 20 years ago from the standpoint of toughness and longevity. I know folks who have had Bouquet Purple return five years.

The Telstar series is still one of my favorites. It was first brought to my attention when it was chosen as a Louisiana Select plant. These delightful plants give outstanding colors in scarlet, pink, purple, salmon and purple picotee. In addition to their cheerful colors, they also have an enticing fragrance.

This past spring, I had the opportunity to see a wonderful planting of Telstar Purple Picotee dianthuses and Symphony Burgundy Picotee petunias. This beautiful monochromatic spring garden showed off the two members of the close-knit violet family of color -- burgundy and purple. The purple in the Telstar dianthus looked to have only a very subtle difference from the burgundy of the Symphony petunia.

Both flowers had a tie-in from white as well. The typical thought is purples and violets are a little subdued in the garden and may go unnoticed on occasion. The white, however, gave them the attention they deserved in the landscape.

If that wasn’t enough, both are picotee. This description originated in the early 1700s and refers to a type of flower with pale petals bordered by a darker color.

The Telstar dianthus series reaches about 8-10 inches in height and can tolerate hot as well as frigid temperatures. When preparing a bed, incorporate 2 pounds of a slow-release, 12-6-6 fertilizer with minor nutrients per 100 square feet of bed space. Give plenty of sun so they will bloom to their potential. Plant at the same depth they are growing in the container in the fall or spring, spacing plants 6-8 inches apart.

Blue verbenas are not traditionally found in fall displays, but they complement the oranges of pumpkins, gourds and other flowers very well. Links to image at 200 dpi
Telstar salmon dianthus partners well with a cool-season planting of Gem Lavender Shades violas. The color will last from fall through late spring.

Lightly side-dress with fertilizer once a month to keep them growing and producing. Keep your hybrid pinks mulched to conserve moisture, deter weed growth and give added cold protection. Mulch also keeps summer soil temperatures cooler, increasing your chances of keeping them around for multiple years. Deadhead old blossoms to keep the plant looking tidy and the flower stems coming.

Dianthuses like the Telstar series allow for partnering with cool-season crops like pansies, violas, snapdragons and flowering kale or cabbage. I also had the opportunity to see a bed of Telstar Salmon dianthuses and Gem Lavender Shades violas. This type of planting will last from fall through late spring.

In addition to the Bouquet and Telstar series, look for the Ideal series that has proven the best in University of Georgia trials. Ideal Carmine and Ideal Rose were chosen as Flueroselect Quality Mark winners, and Ideal Violet was an All-America Selections award-winner. The Melody series offers several choices, and the Melody Pink was chosen as an All-America Selections winner.

Regardless, if you haven’t tried dianthus in several years, the new hybrids may surprise you with their color, cold-hardiness and residual vigor in subsequent years.

A great time to see some of these plants is at the Fall Flower and Garden Fest on Oct. 12-13. The annual event is at Mississippi State University’s Truck Crops Experiment Station on Highway 51, just south of Crystal Springs. Hours are 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Call (601) 892-3731 for more information.

-30-

Released: October 4, 2007
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: Top | Bottom