3,226 Garden Web Discussions | Dahlias

Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
stephanie_kay(5a IL)

Thank you everyone,
@mantis_oh thank you for posting the picture. That is nothing like what I was expecting.
At Daves Garden, the photo posted by Milochka is what I was expecting and the reason I bought them. Fingers crossed that is what I get.

    Bookmark     May 7, 2012 at 4:57PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
pirl

Stephanie - I also bought this one, earlier this year, from a big box store. How big was the flower when you grew it? Mine has the same Peaches 'n Cream name. Thanks.

    Bookmark     July 24, 2013 at 3:18PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CCvacation

These two will send plants... Both excellent vendors.
http://www.cgdahlias.com/
http://www.dahlias4u.com/

    Bookmark     July 22, 2013 at 2:15AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
Muffin01

Yes, it's to late. You would be tampering with their little roots system. I did that one year, lifted them before they started sprouting to put better soil under them and they grew back very slow, set them back by 4 weeks.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 5:28PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CCvacation

Lin, what a sweet, clear yellow that bloom is! Thank you for sharing!

Just you wait... You'll have four bouquets on your desk at all times, with no room to work, just because you HAVE to show them off! Love it!

Cheers!
CC

    Bookmark     July 19, 2013 at 11:17AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
linaria_gw

Hi CC,
thanks for your nice comment, that Glorie is definitely one of my favorites!
And yes, hoping for loads of bouquets, planed some kind of color scheme, so I had the option (if all keep growing nicely) to arrange warm, glowing, yellows, orange, reds, or,
more subtle, pale pink, pastel yellow, or dark purple with white.

and on an especially daring moment, perhaps hot pink with orange...

well, have a great Dahlia season, bye, Lin

    Bookmark     July 19, 2013 at 5:37PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
graceSF

I'm not an expert in the garden but I had a similar problem last summer with my sunflowers. I came to the conclusion it is a fungal problem in the root system. We don't get much sun in the summer and sometimes the ground just doesn't warm up and dry out. I got a powder called Actinovate and fed the plants with it and it really helped. It definitely helps with fungal issues. I just treated all my plants today even though I haven't noticed a problem. The powder adds beneficial microbes that help root systems. My local hydroponics store also had another brand of microbe that also helps roots out but don't remember the name. Maybe go into your local stores and ask them. I found nothing at Home Depot and more commercial like nurseries. These items were carried in more organic gardening type places. I hope this helps.

    Bookmark     July 14, 2013 at 5:53PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CCvacation

You might also try a tablespoon of Epson Salt at the base of each plant, watered in well. It is amazing how the Magnesium helps dahlia plants!

Good luck, and please update us on what you've tried, and it's result!

CC

    Bookmark     July 19, 2013 at 11:21AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
pdshop(5)

I wish there was another spray on other than Miracle Grow. It has a ton of salt in it. I am in CO and there is already salt in the soil.

    Bookmark     July 15, 2013 at 2:39PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
mandolls(4)

I add a healthy pinch of bone meal to each hole as I plant the tubers. You can also scratch it into the surface around the plant.

    Bookmark     July 18, 2013 at 7:11AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jacqueinthegorge(USDA 8 / Sunset 5)

Thanks CCvacation, I will try the milk spray. Seems like it would not be as damaging to the leaves.

Oh the gophers are terrible on dahlias here. We gas the tunnels, and it keeps the population down, but all it takes is one...

Another thing I may try is planting a trap crop for the gophers. Jerusalem artichokes are a lot cheaper to replace than a named dahlia, and I imagine the tubers are very similar in food value to a rodent.

I'll let you know how plunging the pots works. Because it's so windy here, the tallest dahlias I grow are 3 feet. I have some 10 and 15 gallon pots I can put them in, so maybe that will work. Between the heat and the damage from the baking soda, some of my dahlias look really sad! and many of the others are showing the beginnings of mildew. Crossing my fingers...

    Bookmark     July 2, 2013 at 8:40PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jacqueinthegorge(USDA 8 / Sunset 5)

The soil in the sunk pots is definitely cooler. But I think that even my shorter-statured dahlias would be happier in 10-gallon containers. I know at least some of the fabric pots are meant to be in the ground, but I'm wondering how they hold up when attacked by gopher teeth. Anyone have any experience? I've also thought about drilling lots of holes in my containers to give the feeder roots more running room, while keeping the tubers safe. I'd think the heavier duty injection-molded containers would be somewhat resistant to gopher teeth, I'd appreciate some opinions.

    Bookmark     July 17, 2013 at 9:01PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
unclehead_gw

I meant to ask if those might have come from Michigan Bulb. I know they sell those varieties and I have occasionally received a couple that were mis-labeled. The ones I have bought from there have never failed to bloom beautifully although MB does receive some bad raps. That pic you posted is a beautiful. I always say, I've never seen an ugly dahlia.

    Bookmark     July 7, 2013 at 9:41PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
tropical_thought(San Francisco)

The name boogie sounds familiar. I may have bought it and neglected to write down in my notes. I may have bought it as a tribute to the 70s. It does match the other two so the colors don't clash. I only have a small garden. I can't have too many , but they are increasing in size so I will have to give away some by next year. I don't think the company was at fault, as I have both big pink and floodlight. If the bulb was wrong it was a bonus bulb, not a case of a mistaken order.

    Bookmark     July 8, 2013 at 9:40AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
pdshop(5)

That means I would have to sacrifice a plant because two shoots from one tuber gives you a shorter, less vigorous plant.
I don't know how to take a cutting? Will it grow if I do that?

    Bookmark     July 4, 2013 at 2:28PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CCvacation

It's pretty late in the season to be taking cuttings with the intention of getting fully blooming plants this year. If they were my plants, I'd leave them alone, and plant clearance annuals from all the sales going on right now in the empty spaces you have.

In trying to gain more plants, you might very well destroy healthy growing and soon-to-be blooming plants.

Cheers!
CC

    Bookmark     July 7, 2013 at 12:36AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
teddahlia

During a very warm summer, they may not grow too much. But when it cools down, they will put on lots of growth and reach their normal height.

    Bookmark     July 5, 2013 at 1:11PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
davidinsf

Is it 2 HEADS on one stem or 2 FACES off of one bud/head?

I had a single stem tulip sprout with 5 blooming tulips this spring but that is not uncommon for tulips.

    Bookmark     June 30, 2013 at 12:44AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
linda_6

It's 2 heads on one stem. They are connected together on one stem.

    Bookmark     July 1, 2013 at 12:59PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
mzdee(6b)

I think you have time. I planted a clearance bulb last summer (late June or so). It bloomed vigorously until October. I was hooked from there on out. So, if you can find them at a discount, go ahead and plant directly in the ground. Here is a pic of one of last year's blooms.

    Bookmark     June 30, 2013 at 3:09PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
katrosa731(9b)

Thank you for the feedback!

The damage seems to be on about 25% of the leaves, or less. It does not move up the plant quickly, but there are a few of the middle leaves that are affected.

Based on CCvacation's feedback, it does sound like I'm underwatering. The bed they're planted in gets about 8 hours of sun and is right up against the side of a house which radiates the heat. I've seen the leaves look a little limpy during the peak hours of a hot day, but they perk back up with a bit of supplemental water. But I guess I need to rig up a second soaker hose for them.

Many thanks!

    Bookmark     June 24, 2013 at 2:03PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
davidinsf

Hi Katrosa

Assuming you mean Oakland CA - my experience may help you.

As you can see, I live in San Francisco (I guess people could think I meant Santa Fe or something!) and this spring/summer has been very sunny - especially for me in the Sunset. I have sandy soil and I know it drains well but I am watering (not heavily but certainly giving each plant a good soaking) at least every other day unless it is foggy. Then I back off to every 3rd day unless the dahlia leaves and buds are drooping.

If I went to twice a week, most of mine would fall over. And I know Oakland is much sunnier than western S.F. So I cast my vote with the underwatering analysis also. Underwatering stresses any plant, which then leaves it vulnerable to any virus in the area. Which is what I think you are getting.

But if your buds are not drooping (which is the first indication of lack of water) then perhaps you aren't underwatering. But I sure know I could NEVER water mine once a week. Even last weekend when it rained I had to water mine on Wed and it actually RAINED Tues night! But again, my soil is amended sand and it drains REAL FAST so it needs more moisture than most gardens I guess.

    Bookmark     June 30, 2013 at 12:58AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
teddahlia

Nice selection of purple and pink flowers along with a bit of white, The red flower buried in there could have been left out.

    Bookmark     June 23, 2013 at 5:41PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CCvacation

Hmm... I think I have a perfect spot for it next to the wood line. Thank you for such a thorough assessment!

Cheers!
CC

    Bookmark     June 23, 2013 at 8:03PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jacqueinthegorge(USDA 8 / Sunset 5)

The Harlequins are a bedding dahlia, getting about a foot tall (or less).

I've grown single plants in 2-gallon pots, where they did reasonably well. So if you want to plant three of them in one pot, I'd go with a 7- or 10-gallon pot.

One-gallon pots are too small in my experience - the roots get too hot.

I like the Harlequins, and I save my favorites. They make tubers just like real dahlias!

    Bookmark     June 19, 2013 at 8:48PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
mandolls(4)

I saw little six packs of bedding dahlias at one of the small nursery set ups around here for the first time this year.

I grew some from seed last year and again this year, and was wondering why they were not popular with the growers. I didnt grow Harlequins, and I grew them in the ground, but the two types I have tried ended up being 12-18" tall and wide. They bloomed well all summer.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2013 at 7:18AM
Sign Up to comment
© 2015 Houzz Inc. Houzz® The new way to design your home™