3,226 Garden Web Discussions | Dahlias

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cookie_ks(9)

Russ:
For someone new to Dahlias, I have to applaud your ambition! Your cuttings look great and your method so organized. I think you are hooked now. Evidently you have a green thumb too. Good luck on your new Dahlia beds.
I am still waiting for the ground to dry out a little so I can till again and get mine in the ground. They are getting too big for their pots...

    Bookmark     May 30, 2008 at 4:59PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Feeling more than a little proud yet somewhat embarrassed too, I should point out I took 522 cuttings, of which I lost 166 to rotting from the bottom of the cutting up to the soil line(??) That's 68% success.

Next year, fewer cuttings, 100% success...;-]

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     May 30, 2008 at 5:26PM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

That is quite surprising. You are indeed very lucky. I'd love to see a photo of the your lemon tart dahlia. Sounds neat.

    Bookmark     May 29, 2008 at 9:57PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Howdy jroot!

Here's a picture of the Lemon Tart that handled the frost. Its neat that there's a picture of the Canna in the pond, which did not fair as well as the Dahlia.

Cheers,
Russ

Here is a link that might be useful: Lemon Tart beats Canna against the frost

    Bookmark     May 30, 2008 at 5:20PM
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phylrae(z5a/centralNYS)

I'm sorry that I didn't remember that it was you, Poochella, who had told me about Sluggo Plus.
I have another question now. I remember seeing/touching my ONE & ONLY slug when I lived in Texas (in about 1987) and I was totally grossed out. Somehow it got inside my apt. north of Houston...and I walked downstairs barefoot to step on this slimy gross thing under my kitchen table! (I didn't even have a garden OR houseplants back then!)

Since I have never encountered another one, and I have grown 2 dahlias now (one from a tuber two years ago & one from seed last year-large bush, BTW), would that suggest that maybe they don't come around these parts?
My mom used to grow marigolds when I was a kid, and I used to have to help weed her garden....I never saw a one.

Thanks for the explanation about where they arrive...I was expecting something chomping underground maybe.
Guess I should still get the SP? For earwigs at l east (they must not be a flying insect, but a crawler too?)

:0) Phyl

    Bookmark     May 30, 2008 at 5:27AM
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Poochella(7 WA)

If you haven't seen a slug in your area you are really living right! The little ones ride in on animal fur so I'll find one on the floor here and there.

Have you seen earwigs? They are so damaging to flower petals and tough little creeps to catch. If you do have them, I would go to the expense of Sluggo Plus as none of the other methods that I've tried anyway seem to catch them: inverted pots atop dahlia stakes, hose lengths on the garden bed floor, rolls of newspaper etc. Never caught one.

It's up to you. A spritz of ammonia will kill the stray slug you might encounter, and their eggs and is very cheap.

    Bookmark     May 30, 2008 at 10:28AM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

Hardening off involves not only the temperature, but also and primarily the degree of radiation from the sun. Yours will probably harden off faster than those started indoors, but I think that the glass in greenhouses also diminishes the amount of radiation the plants receive indoors.

If I were in your shoes, I would harden them off for a few days in filtered light outside. I had almost as many pots are you have so I know the anguish of moving them all.

Fortunately, I think we are over the risk of frost here in Southern Ontario, but I will still be watching with care.

John

    Bookmark     May 29, 2008 at 5:13PM
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misslucinda

Hi Alyrics

This is posted on Dalia Barn's website:

"Bone Meal is recommended at planting time. Bone Meal builds strong tubers. Dahlias require low nitrogen fertilizers. We recommend fertilizers with a 5-10-10 ratio within 30 days of planting and again approximately 4 weeks later. Do Not overfeed your dahlias, doing so will promote weak stems, small blooms or tubers that rot or shrivel in storage."

Hope this helps.

    Bookmark     May 29, 2008 at 12:18AM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

FWIW, I butchered my tubers last year and had more than a few that grew roots but no eyes; ergo no sprouts. No matter what you do to the tuber, if there isn't the right crown material attached to it, it will never sprout.

Your next question may well be; "what is the right crown material?" Well, my answer will be that it is crown material which has shown eyes forming. IOWs, its a matter of leaving the tuber in the ground after the frost so that it begins to eye up before you cut the tubers apart...or, doing the same thing in spring; let the tuber clump warm up, show eyes, and then cut it.

I read a ton of descriptions and still botched the work...because my tuber clumps didn't have any eyes when I tried to cut them apart.

Finally, and again FWIW, the longest it took a tuber of mine to produce a sprout capable of cutting (note: not an eye, but a sprout) was 9 weeks and 2 days (Matchmaker, Outta Da Blue, Iceberg, Patches). I have another, Playboy, that still hasn't produced a sprout capable of cutting and its been almost 11 weeks.

So, either wait that long, or call it on account of lack of crown.

To me, its a dud tuber if there's no eye within a month.

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 8:14PM
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Poochella(7 WA)

Russ summed it up nicely on needing crown material with eye tissue to begin with to produce a plant. I'd say a month is about the longest I'd wait too before tossing as a 'blind' tuber. (Maybe longer if I really, really wanted that variety.)

Kitkat, chopping off the rotted fingers was good. Get rid of anything rotten to prevent it from spreading. I should ask if the 'fingers' are coming off the crown near the old stem, or off the larger main tuber. If they originate off the tuber, you'll have no dahlias because they lack crown material like Russ said. If healthy, the compost pile is a perfect place for unusable tubers but anything rotted or discolored gets treated as trash here.

Books, hmmm. Bill McLaren's book is highly regarded. The ADS puts out "Raising Dahlias the Easy Way" which might be useful. Check Amazon or such for others.

Here is a link that might be useful: dahlia books

    Bookmark     May 28, 2008 at 1:14PM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

In the fall, if there are tubers, you can store them just like the other dahlias. No special treatment. You will probably have more plants next year as a result. I know that I did. :)

    Bookmark     May 28, 2008 at 9:10AM
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vikingcraftsman

Well Mrs Rose Fletcher has bloomed. Still standing by for sunny.

    Bookmark     May 22, 2008 at 2:47PM
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lattefairy(Zone 5, CO)

Beautiful!

    Bookmark     May 28, 2008 at 5:02AM
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busy-girl

Russ,
Try the heavier stuff that wholesale nurseries put down....It is tough as nails and can be used over and over. I found regular landscape cloth disintegrates after a while. It comes in assorted widths and you pin it down with big u shaped pins and best of all it keeps the weeds from springing up.
Jan

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 8:44PM
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bluestarrgallery(zone 7 GA)

The best garden cloth I have found is Baycor cloth - have had it down for 4 years now and it is still good. Bermuda grass however can grow through it - but you probably don't have that type of grass where you live. I get the Baycor in 3 foot rolls anything wider and the roll is too heavy to lift. Not cheap but very good. I put bark over the ground cover cloth because it is very hot where I live and the cloth is black and absorbs the heat, but in a milder or damp climate it would be great just plain. I do have problems with weed seeds germinating in the bark over the cloth and since I try to go organic as much as possible, I have to hand weed a pre-emergent should prevent that if you use. I ordered mine from OBC Northwest in Oregon and put it down with the six inch metal staples which I order by the box - those aren't cheap either due to the freight - but it sure has saved me a ton of time in weeding - so I guess time is money saved too. I have even taken up a few beds and saved the cloth and re-used it on other beds.

I got cheaper cloth and it didn't last worth beans - more trouble than it was worth.

    Bookmark     May 27, 2008 at 11:03AM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Dig the thing out of the crappy soil, then dig a hole 2' wide and 1' deep where you want to plant them. Put decent soil in the hole, and put the tuber (and sprout) back in.

IMO, nothing can be done in any other way if the plant grows spindly and pathetic. Put as many chemicals into clay as you want and it will still be clay, and won't drain properly, and therefore won't service the Dahlia well. Not saying you have clay, but whatever you do have isn't suitable for Dahlias. So change it.

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 8:18PM
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triple_b(BC 5b)

Hey Larry, guess what? Triple_b is a SHE!!
How do ya do?

    Bookmark     May 27, 2008 at 2:55AM
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jroot(5A Ont. Canada (near Guelph))

Sorry to rain on your parade, Russ, but tomorrow ( zone 5 southern Ontario near Guelph ) the forecast is from 2C to 4C. I would wait until after that, or be prepared to cover them on Tuesday night. I know that I will be covering all of mine tomorrow night (Tuesday).

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 7:53PM
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sturgeonguy(5a ON)

Jroot,

There's forecasts, and then there's forecasts...;-]

I'm 50' from a fairly large lake. It does all sorts of things to forecasts, especially considering it is currently 25C at 8:00pm.

My Dahlias will be within 5' of running water, which isn't going to get any colder than 5C no matter what the air temp goes to for an hour or two.

Anyway, I'm not putting anything out which I only have 1 of, so if it all fails misrably, I'll just do it again when I have time...;-]

Cheers,
Russ

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 8:03PM
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Noni Morrison

Kristin, where are you? Are you in driving distance of Vashon Island? I have several nice whites for cutting I would be glad to share with you, or start cuttings from but do to my recent knee replacement would need help digging them. Email me at lilymolady@gmail.com.

I have Center Court, Karma Serena, Angel Dust (I think I stll have it!) and I have many plants I would like to give away to replace with new ones..fine flowers, just ones I am bored with. Among those would be French Doll, and Brandon James. Many others could be divided. They ahve been in place for 2 years now.

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 1:03PM
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triple_b(BC 5b)

and don't use bone meal because the dogs dig it up.
* * *
I have a girlfriend who lives a few miles out of town. Whenever she uses bonemeal, all the dogs in the area (fenced in thank goodness) start barking and when she uses bloodmeal all the feral cats visit her yard.

    Bookmark     May 23, 2008 at 2:38PM
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larry_c(z6 Stl. Mo.)

Mt thoughts on fertilizers. Nothing..NOTHING. can beat a good 3" layer of compost. I heap it around my plants to a min. 12" diameter. The worms move it into the earth, create air holes, and it helps retain moisture. This stuff is magic.

We built a new bed last year. It was junk until I added 3" of compost in late July and then it just exploded.

CrAzY LaRrY

    Bookmark     May 26, 2008 at 6:59AM
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testinghttp://www.flickr.com/photos/26884312@N02/2516943070/
Posted by triple_b(BC 5b) May 23, 2008
5 Comments
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triple_b(BC 5b)

still working on how to do that. Thanks!

    Bookmark     May 24, 2008 at 6:24PM
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luvsgrtdanes

It's pretty simple email me and I will try to explain how!!!

    Bookmark     May 24, 2008 at 11:16PM
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triple_b(BC 5b)

yes the catalogue got it wrong. One assumes it to be LULU as it is a more common name.
Keeping my fingers crossed. Actually maybe I will gently lift it out and let it dry a bit then put it back in again.

    Bookmark     May 7, 2008 at 5:05PM
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triple_b(BC 5b)

Everyone is doing just ducky, soaked or no. I guess the drainage is sufficient after all.

    Bookmark     May 22, 2008 at 5:17PM
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