By
Norman Winter The
petunia has been one of the most popular annual flowers ever
to grace our gardens. Whether edging a flower bed, covering
bare ground, or spilling over a container or hanging basket,
petunias give us some of our best color. Taking
into consideration the new vigorous petunias like Purple
Wave and Surfinias, the petunias we know today are a far cry
from the ones our ancestors grew. Two
species of petunias were discovered in South America in the
1700s and early 1800s. Soon after, breeders in Germany and
England began crossing them to try to come up with more
colors and larger flowers. It was not until 1953 that the
first red petunia came on the market. The first yellow
petunia made its debut in 1977. The
floribunda series came about in 1983 with the introduction
of the Madness series. That same year Pan American Seed
introduced Purple Wave, which became an All American Winner
for 1995 and started a new class of spreading
petunias. But when
you go to your garden center for petunias and see the terms
floribunda, grandiflora, multiflora, spreading and
milliflora, what will it mean to you? The
gardening world became infatuated with the class called
grandiflora. These petunias have the largest flowers with 3-
to 4-inch blooms, and they sometime become sprawling plants.
There are single- and double-flowered grandifloras. These do
best in cool weather. The
multiflora class performs better than most others in adverse
weather conditions, especially hot or wet spells. They may
be single or doubled flowered but are smaller than the
grandifloras with flower sizes of 1 to 3 inches. The
floribunda is basically an improved multiflora. Their
flowers are slightly larger and produced in abundance. They
flower earlier like the grandiflora but are much more
tolerant of weather. These are excellent for mass
plantings. The
milliflora class was coined in 1996 with the debut of the
Fantasy series. These petunias are about 2/3 the size of
normal petunias with flower sizes of 1 inch or less. They
produce flowers so abundantly they literally cover the
plant. They are excellent for hanging baskets and
containers. The
spreading petunias have caught my fancy in recent years.
These are the flowering ground covers like the
seed-propagated Purple Wave and the vegetative-propagated
Surfinias and Supertunias. Pick a
site in full sun six hours or more daily if you want to have
beds that look like the "Year of the Petunia." They will
grow adequately in part shade, but you get part bloom as
well. Even
though petunias thrive in a variety of soils, they do best
in beds with a light, well-drained landscape mix available
at any garden center. When you
buy your transplants, select a flat in bloom to guide you
for color, and then buy the flat of that variety not yet in
bloom. These will adapt more readily to your bed. Space
the multifloras, grandifloras and floribundas about 10
inches apart. Space the spreading petunias like Purple Wave
20 inches apart and the millifloras 6 to 10
inches. Spread a
good layer of mulch around the plants to prevent mud from
spattering on the flowers, to retain moisture and to
discourage weeds. Petunias
have many uses in the landscape. Edge a perennial border
with the compact millifloras or floribundas. Plant them on
the ends of vegetable gardens and around those growing on
trellises. There bright color will look great in contrast to
the green leaves of the vegetables. Released:
Feb. 6, 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
Colorful Petunias
Rank In Popularity
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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