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marcy55_gw

shriveled dahlia tubers

marcy55
14 years ago

Stored dahlias according to instructions in a cardboard box, each one seperated from the other with newspaper and in shavings. Stored in my garage in a cupboard. Just took them out for a look and all of them shriveled up, No odors. Help!!! I am new to this gardening thing and I am so upset that I may of ruined these.

Comments (27)

  • mariana2007
    14 years ago

    I planted my shriveled dahlias last week. I stored mine the same way like yours. They started to grow roots already. I planted them in a big transparent plastic box and I can see the roots through the box.

  • Poochella
    14 years ago

    Call the lifeguard, PD! Depending on local humidity and storage medium, you really need to check those tubers several times through the winter and add moisture or air out as needed. I have a few that are shriveled to a degree, but I don't worry about it- if they want to live, they'll grow. I never really found that soaking shriveled tubers did much good: once they lose their interior moisture it's hard to get it back unless new roots can take over and form new tubers to support the growth. That's my thinking, anyway.

  • homemommy
    14 years ago

    It really depends on just how far gone they are. I have not become a pro at the art of storing tubers, I had some with minimal care make it through the winter, others not so much. It seems the ones I did the least prep too, ended up doing the best.

    I have planted some pretty nasty tubers in the past however and was rewarded with very nice plants....

  • pdshop
    14 years ago

    I didn't leave them in the pool. There is just water in there now. I thought they might plump up. I don't have the space to pput them in the ground. I havee to know if they will work. Our weather in MA. has been so whacky . 70 degrees for over a week. Things are flowering. I know we will get another bout of cold weather so I am waiting.

  • keriann_lakegeneva
    14 years ago

    I have misted shriveled tubers for a few weeks and they always come back for me.

    ......mist 2 weeks and then pot up.

    Keriann~

  • ceh2101
    14 years ago

    Hi pdshop,

    It is too early to plant the dahlias directly outside in the ground here in Massachusetts. You could try starting them in a tray with some potting mix, seed starter or peat moss. I have found all work. Then if they sprout, put them in a pot until they are about 10 inches tall, then acclimatize them to outdoors, then you can plant them.

    The basic issue is that the tuber has to get fairly warm to start, and the 60 degree recommended soil does not start here in Mass until early June. However, I have found that if I start them inside and plant them outside that they are just fine as long as there is no HARD frost. If it is going to be chilly, you can just put a frost blanket over them.

    Much of what I am saying here is heretical, but it seems to work. I have dahlias from late June to November.

  • pdshop
    14 years ago

    Hi ceh, I have some under grow lights in the cellar and some out in the sun with misting. Hasn't this Spring been a teaser. Alot of my plants are flowering. I hope we don't get hit by a real cold spell.

  • nhdahlialover
    14 years ago

    I wish it was going to stay nice and unseasonably warm here in New England, so I could plant in the ground. No bugs yet! Planting without being swarmed by black flies would be a real treat!

  • ceh2101
    14 years ago

    Hi nhdahlialover. Please see the message I posted on transplanting dahlias. It has a link to the CG Dahlias tips on growing. If you start them inside, you could transplant now as long as you have a frost blanket just in case. I have some coming in the mail and plan to plant on Monday after the cold weekend.

    I think that a lot of the information out there about dahlias is simply folklore.

    Pdshop, however, is clearly ahead of me given that some of her dahlias are flowering. A couple of mine are 2-3' tall', but they have not flowered!

  • Linda G (zone 6a)
    14 years ago

    hey ceh2101, thanks for the message/link on the post for transplanting dahlias. You are right, it really does not work waiting to 60 degree soil. You are in MA, yes? When do you put your tubers in the ground?

    I am always looking for ways to get earlier bloom. I haven't started anything yet to see what will sprout - not alot of room inside to keep the started tubers, although if I can put cutting outside......that could be a thought.

    Thanks
    Linda

  • ceh2101
    14 years ago

    Hi Linda,

    I plant the tubers inside, starting in January and will transplant them next week after it stops raining. Just in case, I bought a frost blanket that protects down to 24 degrees, or really gives you 6 degrees of protection. It takes a hard frost to really kill a dahlia, so I think they will be all right as long as temps are above 20 degrees.

    They just need the higher temperature inside to break out of their dormancy and get going for a few inches.

  • pdshop
    14 years ago

    I didn't mean my dahlias were flowering. I meant other plants outside that are early. Thanks for the info.

  • northerner_on
    14 years ago

    I just received this dahlia tuber in the mail and would like to pot it up to give it a head start but how do I plant it? There is no sign of roots or a shoot and I don't know how to position it in the pot. Which way is up? It is about 5 inches long and 1.5 inches wide. These aren't very good pics. but you can get an idea from them. Pics. show each side of tuber. Thank you.
    Northerner.
    {{gwi:638481}}

    {{gwi:638482}}

  • plantlady2008
    14 years ago

    the collar is on the right side in the first picture- that's the top. If you lay the tuber on it's side & just cover w/ an inch of soil, even it the shoot comes out the back of the collar, it will grow around & grow upwards anyway.

  • northerner_on
    14 years ago

    Thank you Plantlady. It will be potted up later today. It's a dinnerplate so I'm really looking forward to the blooms.

  • sharon_s
    14 years ago

    This is my first time posting in this forum. I'll share my shriveled dahlia story, since it might make someone laugh. This was my first experience with holding dahlias over the winter.

    I have a thing for the small-flowered dahlias (Pooh, Bishop of Llandaff...) I waited too long to dig my dahlias this past fall (we had extended summer temps and then suddenly got whacked with freezing temps). I was prying these guys out of frozen ground and frozen pots (the pots had to come inside to thaw, they were frozen solid).

    I figured they were goners, but I held on to the tubers, just in case. A few weeks ago I took them out and they looked AWFUL. Shriveled and felt soft to me, except for one (my beloved 'Pooh') which had a few eyes. Potted up Pooh and put the rest in the garbage and ordered more tubers, kicking myself for waiting so long to dig.

    Yesterday, I was cleaning the potting area in my basement and realized I had never tossed the bag with the dead dahlias. Decided to rummage through--they didn't look quite as shriveled as before and 5 out of 7 had eyes! Dug them out of the trash bag and potted them up. Here's hoping they grow! I think I'd better find a friend to share some of these with...

  • jerry_d
    13 years ago

    I planted one dahlia [Bishop of Llandoff] last year that I bought from White Flower Farm. In the fall, I dug it up and put in a paper bag with shredded newspaper and stored in a cold, dark closet on the ground level of my townhouse. When I checked the condition of the dahlia a month or so ago it was all shriveled up and looked mummified. So I pitched it and order a new dahlia from WFF which I planted a week or so ago.

    Is it possible to dig up a dahlia in the fall, put in a flower pot, cover with dirt and store the potted bulb that way through the winter in a dark, cold closet? And sprinkle the pot occasionally to keep the soil from totally drying out. Would that work to winter over a dahlia?

    Jerry

  • jen-abraham_hotmail_com
    13 years ago

    Hi,
    I was thinking that my shriveled Dahlias were gonners too.(I'm new to Dahlias,as of last year.)I put them in the ground a couple weeks ago because I figured they probably wouldn't do anything anyway, but to my surprise,3 out of 6 are sending up some nice shoots now...some are a couple inches tall. If it frosts, I'll cover them! I've learned that shriveled Dahlias can snap out of it!

  • Poochella
    13 years ago

    Hurray for the resurrection of shriveled dahlias! They are often tough little buggers. "Pooh" will be back in my garden this year too- so bright and cute.

    Jerry D, my thought regarding your question is if you're going to dig a dahlia up, why not just store it in a bag or pot of vermiculite or wood shavings vs soil? Same amount of work, or less, and you'd be using a proven storage media. You can still check moisture levels through the dormant season. Perhaps an experiment of storing some in soil, some in shavings/vermiculite would be interesting to try.

  • Bernyca
    10 years ago

    I'm curious as to why many of the tubers I've had curing for a couple days are already "rubbery" and others shriveling? I only dug a couple of 'em up but have about 20 still to get to and am nervous I'm gonna kill 'em.

  • silversurfer2133
    7 years ago

    SOMEONE PLEASE HELP! I bought these Dahlia tubers last year from the store and this is how they came. I'm new to the whole tuber/bulb game and had no idea what to do. can anyone tell me if these are any good or worth trying to plant? they are shriveled up and are very light. what do i do??? thanks

  • cicivacation
    7 years ago

    If they are really light, most likely they are goners. But you can always pot them up with just-damp potting mix and see if they sprout in a couple weeks. You'll know by March if they have any life left in them.

  • silversurfer2133
    7 years ago

    thanks cici! im might be doin somethin wrong but to me since they were dried out i have them soaking in water. will that even do any good? its a shame to think they are all bad but who knows how old they are!

  • cicivacation
    7 years ago

    Water often starts rot. I never soak tubers in water, as their fine feeder roots are destroyed when originally dug from the ground... they can't drink water without them. Very little moisture will set the tuber's growth in motion, if there is any life in it.

    Sorry to say, but the dead tissue of the outer tuber is soaking up that water like a sponge, and that is not a good thing. I would throw them all in one pot with some dried soil above and below, and let it sit for several weeks. Excavate it carefully in mid-March, and see if there are any shoots. Repot those living tubers into single pots, and be very conservative in the amount of water you give it... just enough that the soil is cool to the touch, not wet, until there are leaves spreading out. By then, feeder roots are established, and the tuber can handle excess water.

    Good luck!

  • silversurfer2133
    7 years ago

    great! thanks alot for your help. ill take them out the water now and go with what you said. fingers X!!!

  • housedaisy
    7 years ago

    On the advice of the company we bought them from, we've been storing our dahlias under a thin layer of compost in a lidded, slatted wooden box in the cellar and have misted the compost lightly but regularly.

    They have now been potted on into 5 inch pots in our little south-facing lean-to with the crown just peaking above the compost. We'll be keeping them like this for about a fortnight until the frosts have passed in our part of the UK.

    In the lean-to we spray pots with ungerminated seeds in and water germinated plants from the bottom via a tray with gravel in the bottom.

    I would welcome people's opinions on the best way to water the potted-on dahlias. Many thanks!


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