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SUNFLOWER ...Are Not All The Same

 

   A New Year, a new Millennium and all sorts of new catalogues are pouring in. I am a catalogue user. Even if I do not buy from all of them that cross my desk I learnt from them. I find out what new plants and seeds are being offered in the New Year and then I know what to watch for when spring comes. I place a few orders, usually for seeds of plants that I may not find easily in the garden centres and that I hope I can grow myself. Also for old favorites; summer is not summer for me if I cannot enjoy picking the small Sungold tomatoes whenever I pass the vine; there is no sweeter or more flavorful tomatoe!

Reading catalogues is a wonderful winter recreation. No expense and beautiful dreams!

   The first thing to look for is the special plants that have been released for the year 2000. A good place to start is with the All -America selections. These are plants that are tested throughout North America at centres such as the Royal Botanical gardens and the University of Guelph as well as numerous other places in Canada and the States.

   For the first time the year 2000 sees an All American award given to a Sunflower and what better time is there to write about sunflowers than in the dark of winter when the thought of them brings spring closer.

   In the past sunflowers were all the same. A very tall plant with a large yellow daisy shaped flower, which turns through the day so that it always faces the sun and even looks like the sun itself. When the flower dies its large seedhead provides a favorite food for many different birds as well as being a nourishing snack for us.

   In recent years there has been an explosion in breeding sunflowers and now there are so many different ones it is difficult to know where to start.  No longer are they all giants; there are dwarf varieties. Some such as Pacino and Sundance Kid are suitable for either container growing or the flower bed. Pacino has numerous bright yellow flowers. After the main one opens, numerous lateral flowers follow producing a mass display. The flowers can be up to 13cms across and the plants are about a metre tall. The same size, but very different in colour and form is Sundance Kid. This sunflower is multi branching and the flowers are semi-double in shades of yellow and bronze. Both these varieties are excellent flowers for cutting. Another small sunflower is the very double Teddy Bear. It grows about 90cm tall and has large yellow flowers like pincushions. It is recommended as a bedding plant.

   The growers have also hybridised a range of pollen free sunflowers which means the flowers will last longer and be more suitable as cut flowers, but will not set seeds.  Moonbright, Sunbright and Sonja all grow about 1 to 2 metres tall and have vivid flowers with dark centres. Another very attractive one is Prado red which is deep red with a yellow and brown centre.

   Finally the All American Winner this year is ‘Soraya’ an imposing sunflower growing 180cms tall carrying branching flower stems which hold pumpkin orange flowers with chocolate centres. The flower stems are strong and 180cms long making them perfect to use as cut flowers.

   Sunflowers are easy to grow if you have an open area with lots of sun. They can be planted directly outside after the danger of frost is past. Sow them 1.5 cms deep and keep them damp until they have germinated. Once started they are strong growers, but may benefit by application of weak fertilizer or manure tea as they are growing. If you are growing for seed it will be necessary to cover the flower heads with bags as they form seed to protect them from birds who will eat the seed as soon as it is formed and not wait until it is ripe. It may be easier to cut the heads and hang them to dry in an airy place indoors. They will take two to three weeks to dry. Then they can be stored to provide birdseed for the winter months.

   Sunflower seed is also good for sprouting and eating in salads, or just munching the young sprouts just as they emerge with their two green cotyledon leaves are delicious.

   For gardeners the year 2000 could be written with a 2 and 3 sunflower head! So plant sunflowers in your garden this year as an icon to celebrate the first summer of the millennium!

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