By
Norman Winter Winter
seems like an odd time to mention waves and surfing, but two
new petunias will have you humming Beach Boys music at your
local garden center this spring. Petunias
have come a long way in the past couple of years. Two of the
newest varieties -- Surfinia and Purple Wave -- will delight
you in how they perform. Surfinia
was a great new plant on the market last year. Surfinias are
trailing, fast-growing, vegetatively propagated petunias.
They are good as a spreading, low-growing ground cover, or
suitable as a cascading plant in window boxes, patio
planters or hanging baskets. Surfinias are most spectacular
planted in hanging baskets with blooms cascading 3 to 4 feet
long. These
disease-resistant plants bloom profusely into the summer,
are easy to grow and maintain, hold up to rain better than
most petunias and are suitable for all hardiness
zones. Five
varieties were available last year: Surfinia
Blue Vein, which has a white blossom tinted with lavender
and brightly veined in purple on compact trailing
foliage; Surfinia
Pink Vein has deep pink flowers with bright fuchsia veining
on compact trailing foliage; Surfinia
Blue, with deep blue flowers on vigorous trailing
foliage; Surfinia
Purple, with reddish-purple cascading blooms on vigorous
foliage; and Surfinia
White has cream-white blossoms with dark purplish centers on
compact foliage. Be on
the lookout next spring for Surfinias. These are among the
toughest, long living petunias we can grow. Try them in
combination with taller growing flowers like melampodiums,
lantanas and marigolds, as well as ornamental grasses. You
will want to plant on 24-inch centers. They are sure to
spread and fill up your bed with riotous color. Purple
Wave is another hot petunia for your landscape. They will
look like a rose-colored carpet when you plant them. It is
the most vigorous petunia on the market today, with so many
flowers per square foot you can hardly see the
foliage. We have
watched Purple Wave at our experiment station in Crystal
Springs, and it is a true winner. I have planted it at my
house, and it has bloomed far longer than other petunias. A
summer annual, it is extremely heat tolerant and bounces
back with vigor after extended periods of wet
weather. A single
plant will cover 4 square feet by mid-season. When planted
in full sun, it forms a dense mat about 6 inches high. It
does not get leggy like other petunias late in the
season. The
flower color of Purple Wave petunia is not a true purple,
but rose-purple with a velvet sheen. Each flower stays in
bloom several days, then fades away as it is replaced by
another one, providing continuous waves of color from spring
until frost. Plant on
well-drained soils mixed as necessary with composted organic
materials, such as composted bark or aged animal manure.
Incorporate a 10-10-10 fertilizer into the planting bed at a
rate of 2 pounds per 100 square feet. Apply a liquid
fertilizer such as 15-30-15, and prune as necessary to keep
the plant from overgrowing the area. The
Purple Wave and Surfinias are petunias that you really must
try in 1997. Look for them in the spring in your local
garden center. Released:
Jan. 9, 1997 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.
Southern
Gardening
New Petunias
Yield Best-Ever Colors
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:43:37
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