3,226 Garden Web Discussions | Dahlias

Grand Finale & Viking Princess
Posted by vikingcraftsman September 1, 2008
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The wife gets another bouquet
Posted by vikingcraftsman September 1, 2008
1 Comment
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linht(4a)

Lovely, what a lucky gal.

    Bookmark     September 1, 2008 at 2:05PM
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Snow bound
Posted by vikingcraftsman August 26, 2008
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vikingcraftsman


    Bookmark     August 30, 2008 at 10:38AM
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Viking princess does Dahlias
Posted by vikingcraftsman August 29, 2008
2 Comments
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

What beautiful flowers...all 4 of them!

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 29, 2008 at 10:25PM
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vikingcraftsman

Thanks sturgeonguy my daughter will appreciate that.

    Bookmark     August 29, 2008 at 11:32PM
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Thanks for not shooting me bouquet
Posted by vikingcraftsman August 25, 2008
3 Comments
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Poochella(7 WA)

Tell her those are worth 50 years, Viking. Very nice. And what woman wouldn't love a guy who toiled over flowers and gathered them just for her?

    Bookmark     August 29, 2008 at 12:01AM
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vikingcraftsman


    Bookmark     August 25, 2008 at 4:27PM
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Snowbound
Posted by vikingcraftsman August 26, 2008
3 Comments
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

I love the glow in the very center, did you put a spot light on it to get that effect?

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 6:05PM
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vikingcraftsman

Russ no that is a setting on my camera. I think it is a high speed setting. Which restricks the amount of light that hits the sensor. I have always had trouble with snowbound getting a good shot in day light. Then I just started taking shots with all setting to see which was best. Now sometimes I know what setting will work for me. I still take more than one shot of each subject just to see what I like.

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 11:26PM
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Poochella(7 WA)

They're black aphids Russ, and very easily managed with a stream of water, like linht said. I use a forceful squirt from your basic spray bottle and that's the end of them. Without a spray bottle, place forefinger and thumb on opposite sides of stem and wipe em out. They're easy.

The ants have a symbiotic relationship with aphids, apparently.

Here is a link that might be useful: Ants and aphids

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 12:37AM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Thanks folks!

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 3:58PM
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vikingcraftsman

Really nice and you caught the color. Is that what your eye saw?

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 11:20PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Yeah Viking, its amazing up close. Because they're small, they don't quite look the same from a distance.

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 3:11PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

The company's trade name is "LES DOIGTS VERTS", so you may have more success looking for information on that name (I found far more hits in google for LES DOIGTS VERTS than Catros-Gerand.)

The one Dahlia I found on their site was "Dahlia Cactus White Star." They didn't give any details, but it looked like a perfectly normal cactus-style Dahlia.

Sorry, but I don't have any experience with seeds.

Cheers,
Russ

Here is a link that might be useful: Les Goigts Verts Official Website

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 2:54PM
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pbunch

Thanks Russ:

I have had pretty good gemination. Looks like +60% after about a week and a half.

Phil
Medellin/Piedras Blancas

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 2:23PM
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triple_b(BC 5b)

A person need sunscreen to stand in front of that one. :>)

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 3:21PM
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oscarthecat(z7MD)

sock it to 'em russ. Steve in Baltimore County.

    Bookmark     August 27, 2008 at 2:13PM
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Maki 2 shots different settings
Posted by vikingcraftsman August 23, 2008
3 Comments
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pdshop(5)

That is amazing. I wish I understood my camera as my dahlias are so beautiful and the pictures don't really show the detail. I need to go to a camera store and havve some instructions with the settings.

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 6:28PM
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vikingcraftsman

Two tricks just for you pdshop. Take a picture of the same dahlia with every setting you have on the camera. Trick two take a shot of the same flower in several different lights. Morning noon and dusk. Once you have compared photos you can use a embrella to cut the light of a photo. I will post two shots for you and you will see what I am talking about.

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 9:37PM
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huey_ga(z7)

The nitrogen amount of 10 is a little high for this time of year in your area. We always cut the nitrogen to 5 or less after the first of September here in the South so our blooms won't be spindly and the tubers rot during the winter. Also, too much nitrogen during the late season can keep the eyes from forming.

You might use it during this last week in August but after this week I would go to Mor-Bloom 0-10-10 (google it) and you can double the strength per gallon and make it 0-20-20 without any problems.

There are a couple of other blooming agents that work well and both have seaweed. Maxsea 3-20-20 (google to find it) and a new one Sea Grow 4-26-26 from Charley's Greenhouse.

These should get those plants blooming

    Bookmark     August 25, 2008 at 9:14PM
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pdshop(5)

Thanks so much. I think the nights have just gotten so much colder. I didn't do the Shultz. Will look into the 0-20-20 Thanks

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 6:10PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

FWIW, all of my Dahlias are being grown in 4" pots. My pictures attest to how well this works. I too have noticed a few holes near my Dahlias, but none of those Dahlias have suffered...guess the little buggers got to the plastic and moved on to someone else's beds...;-]

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 2:17PM
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pdshop(5)

Wow! I have never had this. That is going to be one lot of shoveling if I have to put them all in pots. I also have voles. I guess I have been lucky the first few years. They have moved on to the one behind the first. Darn things are 5 feet high and I have not seen the buds open yet. We have had some 50 degree nights. I am worried about alot of my buds.

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 6:04PM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

My thoughts exactly.

1) There has to be a difference in the soil where they are planted. At my house, the soil is different at the back from the front of the house.

2) Also, how loose is her soil? I find they grow better where the soil is loose and humousy. Even in my dahlia bed, at the end of the bed closest to the grass, the plants don't grow as tall.

3) Does she had good drainage?

The tubers should be okay this fall for her. However, suggest that she really work that bed up, fairly deeply. I would suggest at least 12 inches (30 cm), and dig in some leaves and compost as well at the same time.

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 2:30PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

FWIW, she has a rose bush beside one of the two (~3-4' away) which is doing great and has put on 1.5' this year already. I did check, it is not blocking sun.

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 2:48PM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

I do both. Obvious divisions can be done in the fall. Some of the more subtle ones are easier to do in the spring when the eyes become really visible, that might not have been visible in the fall.

... just my two cents worth.

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 12:14PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

I think one of the key things to dividing is having visible eyes...knowing which tubers are duds and which will produce a new flower.

Last year I lifted my tuber clumps shortly after cutting the stems, which meant I had not left them in to allow the eyes to form. When I divided my tubers I had nothing to go on, and many of them ended up not propagating (my fault!)

Everything I've read says to cut the stalks and then leave the clump in the ground for a week or two, depending on frost conditions. You may want to cover the ground with straw or some other means of keeping the tubers from freezing while this eyeing up occurs, or, heaven forbid, cut the stalks sooner...(I wouldn't!)

If you can't leave them in the ground to eye up, then I would make as few divisions as possible in the fall. Divide only to make them manageable in storage, and ensure you don't have any soil left in the clump so as to avoid rotting. Then you can make further divisions in the spring once you've brought them out and they eye up.

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     August 26, 2008 at 2:22PM
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