![]() |
From Our Newsletter: Dahlias
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs | My Basket |
|
|
|
|
|
| Here’s a wealth of information about DAHLIAS from our email Gazette and past catalogs, starting with the most recently published. For other topics, please see our main Newsletter Archives page. To subscribe to our FREE email newsletter, click here. |
How to Make Your Dahlia Bouquets Last Even Longer Fall is the glory season for dahlias, and hopefully you’re harvesting fistfuls of their beautiful blossoms every few days, as we are. For us they usually last five days or so with no special treatment, but for even longer vase-life see a pro’s advice at our new Bulbs as Cut Flowers page. (Sept. 2008) ‘Kaiser Wilhelm’: Now Even Older German researchers have determined that ‘Kaiser Wilhelm’, one of the world’s oldest surviving dahlias and our 2007 Spring-Planted Heirloom Bulb of the Year, was introduced by Christian Deegen, the father of German dahlias, in 1881, twelve years earlier than was previously believed. Sehr gut! (Sept. 2008) Read Scott’s “Savoring Dahlias” Article in Old House Journal Starting on page 24 of the June issue of Old-House Journal you’ll find Scott spreading the good word about heirloom dahlias. His article includes a list of eight favorites you can plant this spring “to enjoy 200 years of dahlia history in your own back yard.” (April 2008) When Perennials Aren’t Enough: A Husband’s New Love Can the right flower strengthen your marriage? Maybe! Our good customer Audrey Kilgore of Akron, Ohio, writes: “My husband is new to the ‘Dahlia Affair’ – for what else can you call loving dahlias? He said none of our perennials lasted long enough and he wanted something tall that bloomed all summer into fall, so I thought about it. The only plant I knew that was easy to grow and filled this need was dahlias. I planted two tall ones this past summer. They were beautiful, and he counted the many butterflies and bees that visited them. He is hooked!” (March 2008) ‘Bloodstone’: Friend of Gladiators “Just now the dahlias are in full blow,” our British friend John Snocken wrote us last August, “and they are very good at slowing the traffic through our village. ‘Bloodstone’! How did that ever drop out of cultivation?” Link of the Month: Elegant Vases, Our Dahlias, and Martha Stewart We’re always looking for interesting vases, and sometimes they find us. Last month our good customer Frances Palmer of Weston, Connecticut, emailed us a few photos of our dahlias “in the garden and in my pots” — and wow! It turns out Frances is a renowned potter whose classic yet quirky tableware and vases are being featured in the February Martha Stewart Living, on newsstands now. Tips for Storing Dahlias (But Only If You Want To!) Our best advice can always be found under Planting and Care at our website. Remember, though, that temperatures and humidity vary from region to region and even house to house, so you may have to experiment to find what works best for you. For storage recommendations from four other experts, check out dahlias.net/seabox/savem.htm at the Colorado Dahlia Society’s excellent website. And send us your tips! We’re always eager to learn. (Nov. 2007) Praise of the Month: ‘Thomas Edison’ Dahlia Our good customer Kathy Winkelman of Sacramento, California, writes: Combo of the Month: ‘Andries Orange’ and Sizzling Partners Our good customer Becca Brown of Worcester, Massachusetts, writes: Garden Expert Says “Let Them Freeze!” In her lively, practical, and encouraging new book, The Way We Garden Now, Katherine Whiteside offers 41 easy “pick-and-choose projects for planting your paradise,” including three devoted to bulbs. We especially liked what she says about storing dahlias: “Misguided gardeners steer clear of dahlias because they fear the need to dig and store the tubers in winter. Guess what? No one cares if you let them freeze to death. Then you’ll have room to try different ones each year.” (Aug. 2007) What’s Eating My Dahlias? We’re always learning from our customers, and several recent calls for help led us to a small pest that’s new to us — and which you may find attacking your dahlias, too. It’s called the potato leaf hopper, and apparently it’s enjoying a boom this year. It feeds on some 200 plants, including dahlias. To learn more, check out ipm.ncsu.edu/AG136/leafhop1.html. (July 2007) Buried Pots Make Dahlia Growing and Storage Extra Easy Here’s a great tip offered in Fine Gardening by Lois Sheinfeld of Southampton, NY, and seconded by Steve Nowotarski writing in the American Dahlia Society Bulletin: Mmmm, What a Delicious Dahlia! William Woys Weaver, author of the acclaimed Heirloom Vegetable Gardening, is a great fan of our dahlias. Recently he surprised us with this tidbit: “Did you know that the tubers of your ‘Yellow Gem’ dahlia are delicious? Better than jicama. Better than yacon.” (March 2007) ‘Little Beeswings’ – Cute Dahlia, Great Song Most gardens are rich with significance that may elude the uninitiated. Here’s an unusual example from our good customer Debra Knapke of Columbus, Ohio: When Bi-Color Dahlias Aren’t: Blame the Heat If your purple and white ‘Deuil du Roi Albert’ is completely purple, or your silver-tipped ‘Princess de Suede’ has lost its silver, chances are it’s been hot lately. Bi-color dahlias normally vary a bit from bloom to bloom, but when the temperature goes up the varying can get extreme. In our trial garden we’ve seen blooms on a single plant of ‘Deuil du’ that are almost all white next to some that are completely purple. Find a Spring Dahlia Sale Near You The annual parade of dahlia society tuber sales has begun. You can check for sale dates in your area at dahlias.net/tubersalestate.htm. These sales are an excellent way to both find dahlias that do well in your area and to get advice from expert growers. Most sales include mainly newer dahlias, but if you find an old one that we don’t offer, please let us know! (April 2006) More Success with Dahlias in the South Here’s some more good news about growing dahlias where it’s HOT from our good customer Della Smith: “One of your ‘Bishop of Llandaffs’ is alive and well in zone-9 Houston, Texas! My daughter, who is a Master Gardener there, has had it return for three years now. She just leaves it in the ground over the winter and in the spring it pops back up. I was there last July, sweat box city, and it was gorgeous. I think that drainage is one of the keys for success there. It is planted in a raised bed.” Can the Queen of Autumn Take Southern Heat? Dahlias, we’ve always said, like it cool. They bloom best in the fall, they come originally from high mountain plateaus in Mexico, and they’re great favorites in northern states like Minnesota. So for years we’ve been warning Deep South gardeners away from them. But our customers are constantly teaching us (thanks!). For tips from five who garden in zones 8 and 9 – including expert John Kreiner of the Dahlia Society of Georgia — click here. (March 2006) Dahlias for the Hungry Phyllis Valle of Milford, Michigan, has been buying bulbs from us since 2000. Here’s one good reason why: Dahlia Survivor is King of the Compost Pile Our good customer Robin Schachat of zone 6/7 Brooklandville, Maryland, emailed us after reading about hardy dahlias in our December newsletter: Busy Mom Discovers Dahlias Hardy in Zone 6 We aren’t making any promises, but our long-time customer Janet Atkinson of zone-6 Sleepy Hollow, NY, writes: OHG Helps National Collection of Dahlias Over the years, Sarah Thomas of the British National Collection of Dahlias has helped us add many great old dahlias to our catalog, and happily we’ve been able to help her, too. This spring she asked us for five dahlias she couldn’t find over there: ‘Bitsa’, ‘Gold Crown’, ‘Nita’, ‘Oreti Kirsty’, and ‘Tinker’s Tim’. We tracked them down at three different growers and sent them to the Collection in May. Yes, Sarah was delighted! (June 2005) Matthew’s Favorite Dahlia Bouquet Our awesome [former] trial-garden manager Matthew Scott writes: See Our Dahlias in Traditional Home Pick up the April issue of Traditional Home magazine and you’ll find a great article by garden editor Ethne Clark titled “Dahlia Delirium.” It leads off with a full-page photo of ‘Juanita’ taken by Scott in our trial garden and wraps up with a special offer we put together just for Traditional Home readers: seven of our finest heirloom dahlias, from ‘Kaiser Wilhelm’ to ‘Kidd’s Climax’. (Feb. 2005) ‘Jersey’s Beauty’ Decorates Altar Again – 67 Years Later Our good customer John Dennis of Amityville, NY, writes: Green Scene Spotlights Our Dahlias Our old dahlias grace the cover of the August edition of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s Green Scene magazine, part of a wonderful article by our good customer and culinary historian, William Woys Weaver. Will says there’s a “healthy revival” of interest in old dahlias and credits it to our “tireless enthusiasm.” (Oct. 2004) Style Alert from Garden Design: Glads and Dahlias Are Cool Again! In its March issue, chic Garden Design magazine offers a full-page “Guide to Plant Snobbery.” Good news: glads and dahlias are in again! ‘Bishop of Llandaff’, they write, “put dahlias on the comeback trail,” and now “the stylometer has swung 180 degrees: not only do bunches of dahlias grace the most sophisticated interiors, it is okay to own up to a weakness for panty-pink cactus forms” like our ‘Miss Rose Fletcher’. As for glads, they write that “tastemakers such as Beth Chatto, English plantswoman, returned to the long-neglected species . . . and rehabilitated the genus.” They praise Gladiolus byzantinus with its “elegantly arching stems with cerise pink flowers” and add that “even the Doris Day types are trendy again.” Fine Gardening Spotlights Our “Antique Beauties” The May/June issue of Fine Gardening magazine features a great article (if we do say so ourselves) by our own Scott Kunst. It’s titled “Antique Beauties: Heirloom Dahlias, Gladiolus, and Cannas,” and it includes dramatic photos of a baker’s dozen of our very best. Check it out! (June 2003) Who Is Bishop of Llandaff and Why Is He Living in My Garden? Dark-leaved, flame-bright ‘Bishop of Llandaff’ is our best-selling dahlia – but who was the bishop? In the ancient cathedral city of Llandaff (now part of Cardiff) in Wales, third-generation nurseryman Fred Treseder spent 50 years growing and breeding dahlias. One fine day in 1924 Fred presented blooms from several of his best seedlings to his good friend, the Right Reverend Joshua Pritchard Hughes, Bishop of Llandaff, and asked him to pick his favorite. An avid supporter of the temperance movement and strict in observing the Sabbath, the Bishop apparently had little interest in gardening – but he knew a fantastic flower when he saw one. Four years later his namesake won an RHS Award of Merit and by 1936 it was one of the most popular dahlias in all of England. (March 2003) Our Customers Write: Hooray for Dahlias and Glads! Last month, we asked you to tell us why you do or don’t plant spring-planted bulbs. To all of you who responded, thank you! Here are bits of what you shared with us. Liz’s Favorite Dahlia Our beloved [former] office manager Liz Rother writes: High Heat & Dahlias Though your dahlias may have stalled and looked stressed this summer, chances are they will revive in the fall – which is their glory season. They’re native to the highlands of Mexico and like it cool. For best bloom, give them plenty of water and don’t forget to fertilize. (Sept. 2002) Red-Hot ‘Bishop’ Inspires Denver Rob Proctor, Director of Horticulture at the Denver Botanic Gardens, gets enthusiastic about one of our best-selling dahlias in the April 2001 issue of Country Living Gardener: Hippopotamus Dahlias Henry Mitchell was one of the twentieth-century’s funniest – and wisest – garden writers. He loved plants, including many that fashionable gardeners scorned. In Henry Mitchell on Gardening, published after his death in 1993, he writes: Wave Hill “Jump Starts” the Fall Garden with Dahlias Led by the fearless Marco Polo Stufano, Wave Hill in the Bronx has become a fabulous, trend-setting garden – and one that embraces dahlias. In the August 1997 issue of Horticulture, Wave Hill gardener John Emmanuel writes: For articles on other topics, see our main Newsletter Archives page. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| For our print catalog click here or send $2.00 to Old House Gardens 536 Third St., Ann Arbor, MI 48103. phone: 734-995-1486 fax: 734-995-1687 email: charlie@oldhousegardens.com | ![]() |
For our free email newsletter, “The Friends of Old Bulbs Gazette” with tips, news, history, & special offers, send us an email with “subscribe” in the subject line to newsletter@oldhousegardens.com. |
| © 1993-2008, Old House Gardens. All rights reserved. | ||