By
Norman Winter Even
though the dog days of summer make many of us cast a wishful
eye toward the Arctic for relief, late summer is also when
gingers really strut their stuff. Scads of
books will tell you that ginger can only be grown in coastal
areas which have the mildest winters. Yet as I travel
through Mississippi and other Southern states, it is
definitely clear that much of Zone 7 and 8 can grow gingers
with the best of those gardeners in Zone 9. I once
thought that if I couldn't grow torch ginger then there was
no ginger worth growing. Obviously, I was young and wrong
because there are lots of other gingers we can grow that are
just as pretty. For the
past several years, I have visited the Atlanta Botanical
Gardens and have come back impressed with scarlet gingers
known as Hedychium coccineum. Lest someone think these
growers have cornered the secret, I also found the same
plants in Yazoo City. Gingers
love dappled shade but also work quite well in full sun with
plenty of water. They prefer deep, well-prepared,
well-drained beds rich in organic matter. The
scarlet ginger is very exotic looking with 10-inch long
orange to red floral spikes produced on 6- to 7-foot canes.
The blooms don't last very long but produce for a long
time. Another
ginger I always wanted to grow but couldn't get to bloom is
the Alpinia purpurata, or red flame ginger. But we have one
just as pretty called the Crepe ginger, Costus
speciosus. The
crepe ginger produces white flowers in a 4-inch bracted red
cone. After the flowers have dropped, the red bract cone
remains pretty for a long period of time, similar to the way
the yellow shrimp plant performs. For
fragrance, you'd want to award the butterfly ginger,
Hedychium coronarium. The white, butterfly-shaped flowers
produced this time of the year are full of fragrance. The
plant is one of the easiest to grow and hardiest for
Mississippi. My
favorite is the hidden ginger or Queen Lily, Curcuma
petiolata. With canna-like leaves, this plant produces one
of the prettiest blooms rivaling the bird of paradise,
heliconia or bromeliad. Tucked down in the plant, the flower
is quite showy. The bloom is a colorful pinkish-purple,
cone-shaped bract with yellow and white. Some gardeners tell
me this plant is invasive. If so, I think it is like having
too many $20 gold pieces because the plant is that
appealing. For
years, I've grown a ginger with striking foliage, the
variegated shell ginger Alpinia zerumbet variegata. The
leaves have a green and zebra-like band of creamy yellow.
Although it blooms from time to time, these are merely a
conversation item when compared to the foliage. While it
comes back yearly in Mount Olive, those of you in Zone 7 may
want to dig it up and grow it in a container during the
winter. Yours will almost surely bloom then. I have
only mentioned a few favorite gingers you might try, but
there are many others. One producer in South Mississippi
lists more than 60 gingers, including one called the peacock
ginger, which I will tell you about some other
time. Released:
Aug. 20, 1998 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
Ginger Adds Spice
To Mississippi Gardens, Too
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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