By
Norman Winter You read
about all sorts of plant enthusiasts claiming certain
flowers are the Queen of Flowers. To a rose lover it's the
rose, to a camellia lover it is the camellia, and so the
story goes with daylilies and hostas. For the
vase, for color, for butterflies and for ease of growing,
there is much to be said for the old fashioned zinnia as the
Queen of the Flower Garden. Many a young grower gets their
gardening teeth cut on this flower. There is
a revival going on in the world of zinnias. It's as if
people woke up and realized this flower is still great.
Couple that realization with some new selections and our
landscape can be full of color for months on end. I
suspect that many stopped growing the tall Old-fashioned
County Fair and cactus-flowered types because of leaf
spotting. Leaf spotting does occur, but much of that is our
fault. We see this happen with many vegetable
crops. The
seeds germinate so easily and the stand of seedlings is
awesome that many a gardener doesn't have the willpower to
thin zinnias to a proper spacing. Many find themselves
growing four to six plants in a space where only one should
be. The result is a poor microclimate for this beloved
flower. This is a case where the spouse with the weakness
needs to have their mate go out and thin. The result will be
a truckload of cut flowers. You
might think of zinnias in four groups of dwarf bedding, tall
cut flower types, spreading zinnias and landscape zinnias.
All will work in the landscape if planned properly. The
dwarf bedding group has one of my favorite series called
Dreamland. Dreamlands have the same giant dahlia shape
flowers but only get about 24 inches tall. They have
performed really well throughout the South with little
disease pressure. The tall
cut flower group has a lot of varieties and has for the most
part been sold as mixtures. Recently they have become more
readily available as single colors which I really like. This
allows us to plant them in bold drifts. Remember to space as
recommended. The
spreading zinnias, also known as narrow leaf zinnias or
zinnia angustifolia, were chosen as Mississippi Medallion
winners last year. The Star series with orange and gold and
Crystal White are the most popular varieties. The current
issue of Southern Living magazine touts them as
outstanding. The
landscape zinnia group is actually a hybrid of the tall and
the narrowleaf. Two varieties in the Profusion series,
orange and cherry, were chosen as All America Selections for
1999 Gold Medal winners. This is the first time that two
zinnias have received the coveted award. From the
displays I have seen, these zinnias are worthy of the award.
Profusion orange and cherry are winners because of proven
disease tolerances noted at all test sites in North America.
I saw these plants at the test at Callaway Gardens in Pine
Mountain, Georgia. Flowers
bloom on 18-inch-tall plants and reach a height of about 20
inches. They are mounded, giving good color on all sides of
the plant. This makes them very suitable for rock type
gardens. You will want to plant your in well-prepared,
well-drained beds about 16 inches apart. For a really show
stopping display, mass about a dozen of the Profusion orange
in combination with blue ageratums. The
Profusion cherry works exceptionally well with the New Gold
lantana and variegated grasses like the zebra or one that is
fairly new to the market called Carex, or Japanese
sedge. Zinnias
are also great for late summer and fall plantings and will
be prominently displayed at this year's Fall Garden Day at
the Truck Crops Branch Experiment Station in Crystal
Springs, Oct. 15 and 16. Released:
June 21, 1999 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
Zinnias May Claim
Top Title In Flower Gardens
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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