Early June - 2014 - Louisiana Nursery and Landscape Association
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Early June - 2014 - Louisiana Nursery and Landscape Association
LSU AgCenter Ornamental Horticulture E-News & Trial Garden Notes Early June 2014 Nursery, Landscape & Garden Center Updates Compiled by Allen Owings, Professor (Horticulture), Hammond Research Station, LSU AgCenter Edited by Rick Bogren, Professor (Communications), LSU AgCenter Phone 985-543-4125; E-mail [email protected]; www.lsuagcenter.com/hammond Ornamental Plant of the Week for June 6, 2014 – Frostproof Gardenia (from Allen Owings) Frostproof gardenia is a great plant home gardeners need to start enjoying. It is a Louisiana Super Plant selection. Frostproof is widely used by landscape professionals. It’s an improvement over other, older gardenia varieties. Frostproof has fast growth, site adaptability and suitability to poorer growing conditions, making it more desirable than August Beauty, Mystery and dwarf varieties. It reaches a mature height of 5 feet with a spread of 4-5 feet. Try it soon for a low-maintenance, good-performing gardenia – which has not been common in the last few years. Frostproof has the fragrance of other gardenias and blooms early to mid-May through early summer. Ornamental Plant of the Week for June 13, 2014 - Luna Hibiscus (from Allen Owings) Luna hibiscus comes in four colors and is a hardy hibiscus for Louisiana. They were named a spring 2014 Louisiana Super Plant. Plant in full sun. Plants grow 3 feet tall and 2-3 feet wide. Space 2-3 feet apart. Plant in spring after danger of frost through midsummer. Flowers are large 7- to 8-inch eyecatching blooms beginning in late spring and continuing through September. These plants grow in average soil and can tolerate poor drainage and even do well submerged along pond edges and in water gardens. Luna hibiscus attracts butterflies and works well in containers. Ornamental Plant of the Week for June 20, 2014 Gomphrena/Globe Amaranth (from Allen Owings) Some of the new gomphrena (globe amaranth) need to be considered for increased use. Fireworks is a newer variety in the gomphrenas. This is not like your older gomphrenas, which we sometimes commonly called bachelor buttons. Some people also call these globe amaranth. They are an old garden standby. Fireworks is very tall (3-4 feet) and has pink flowers with light sprinkles of purple while other traditional gomphrena have light purple, lavender, white, dark purple and pink flowers. Plants can be from 6 inches to 4 feet tall, depending on which variety you plant. Full sun is best for these. Limit irrigation also. Select the Audray, All Around or Las Vegas series if you want smaller-growing varieties. Ornamental Plant of the Week for June 27, 2014 Copper Plants (from Allen Owings) Copper plants are great foliage plants for the summer and fall landscape. When planted in spring, these beautiful tropicallooking small shrubs turn into fabulous accent plants in color beds as we get later in to the growing season. They prefer long, hot days. One of the old common copper plant varieties in Louisiana is called Louisiana Red. This one has red foliage on a 5-foot-tall plant. Other varieties have bronze, green, yellow, bicolored and tricolored appearances. Heights vary from 2-6 feet at maturity in the fall. These can be perennials in zone 9A and south and annuals in zone 8B and north. You can find many new varieties. They require full sun, limited irrigation and low fertility. Landscape News Articles (from Allen Owings and Rick Bogren) New Easy Care Rose Trials Initiated – May 23 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/may/headline_news/New-roses-needless-care.htm Pentas - May 30 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/may/headline_news/Pentas-providelandscape-color-now-through-fall-.htm Evaluation of New Crape Myrtle Varieties – June 6 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/June/headline_news/New-AgCenterstudies-focus-on-crape-myrtles-.htm Trial Gardens – New Bounce and Big Bounce Impatiens (from Owings) Bounce (compact) and Big Bounce (vigorous) hybrid impatiens debuted at 2014 Spring Trials. These are from Selecta. Big Bounce is available in cherry, red, violet, white and lavender. Bounce is available in cherry, lilac, pink flame, white and violet. You can anticipate 30-inch height on Big Bounce and 18-inch height on Bounce. These series of impatiens are resistant to impatiens downy mildew. Goeff Denny at Mississippi State University heard at spring trials that the Bounce series will be for mass merchandisers and the Big Bounce series will be for independent retailers. Selecta is positioning these plants as a replacement for regular impatiens. This plant will enjoy the largest promotional/marketing campaign in horticulture industry. Trial Gardens – Daylily Species Collection (from Allen Owings) Thanks to Cecil Pounders at USDA-ARS in Poplarville, Mississippi, for our new collection of species daylilies planted in the sun garden at the LSU AgCenter Hammond Research Station. Hemerocallis fluva rosea Hemerocallis fulva Hemerocallis fulva disticha Hemerocallis aurantiaca Hemerocallis forrestii Hemerocallis vespertina Hemerocallis multifolia Hemerocallis littorea Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus Hemerocallis fulva hakuunensis Hemerocallis fulva longituba Hemerocallis fulva sempervirens Hemerocallis fulva maculata Hemerocallis esculenta Hemerocallis citrina Hemerocallis altissima Louisiana Super Plants – Spring 2014 Kauai series torenia Luna series hibiscus Flutterby Petite Tutti Fruitti Pink buddleia Louisiana Super Plants - Fall 2014 The Louisiana Super Plant Selection and Advisory Committee, in cooperation with the LSU AgCenter, announces the Louisiana Super Plant selections for fall 2014: Mesa series gaillardia Rabbiteye blueberry Trial Gardens – Trialing New Crape Myrtles (from Allen Owings) A landscape trial that includes most of the recently introduced crape myrtle cultivars has been initiated over the past year at the LSU AgCenter Hammond Research Station. These collections include Early Bird, Razzle Dazzle, Enduring Summer, Delta, Barnyard, Magic and Ebony (aka Black Diamond) series in addition to several other cultivars. The Early Bird series has been on the market the longest and was bred by John Davy at Panhandle Growers in Florida. They were released by Plant Development Services Inc. as part of the Southern Living Plant Collection. These are dwarf-growing plants maturing at 4 feet. Early Bird Lavender (soft lavender) is promoted as a very heavy earlier bloomer and is the earliest-flowering crape myrtle in LSU AgCenter trials. Other cultivars include Early Bird Purple and Early Bird White. Early Bird Purple and Early Bird White have been less-than-average performers in our trials at the LSU AgCenter. For several years, the burgundy-foliaged Delta Jazz (semi-dwarf, brilliant pink) from Plant Development Services, Inc. has been a stand-alone cultivar. This cultivar is also part of the Southern Living Plant Collection. Five-year-old plants of Delta Jazz are 8 feet tall in most locations. Plants are classified as semi-dwarf growers, which normally indicates heights ranging from 8-12 feet. New for 2014 are four new color additions – Delta Breeze (light lavender), Delta Eclipse (brilliant purple), Delta Midnight (white) and Delta Flame (dark red). The new dark burgundy-foliaged Ebony series from Cecil Pounders at the USDA-ARS are also being sold under the Black Diamond name by J. Berry Nursery. These plants mature at 8 feet and retain foliage color spring through fall. Ebony Cultivar Name Black Diamond Cultivar Name Ebony and Ivory (white) Ebony Flame (dark red) Ebony Embers (deep red) Ebony Fire (dark red) Ebony Glow (light pink to white) Black Diamond Pure White Black Diamond Best Red Black Diamond Red Hot Black Diamond Crimson Red Black Diamond Blush Red Rooster (brilliant red), Purple Cow (deep purple) and Pink Pig (soft pale pink) are being sold as “mid-sized” growers and are promoted collectively as the “Barnyard Favorites” in the Gardener’s Confidence Collection. Red Rooster is “something to crow about,” Pink Pig is something to “squeal with delight” and Purple Cow can be used to create an “udderly majestic garden.” Also in the Gardener’s Confidence Collection are the Razzle Dazzle crape myrtles. These have been around for eight years or so now. True dwarf habits at 4 feet, cultivars are Berry Dazzle (fuchsia), Cherry Dazzle (cherry red), Dazzle Me Pink (pink), Diamond Dazzle (pure white), Strawberry Dazzle (neon rose) and Sweetheart Dazzle (pink). Cherry Dazzle has been a longtime exceptional performer in LSU AgCenter landscape trials. The Magic series from Plant Introductions that are now part of the First Editions program by Bailey Nurseries includes Coral Magic (salmon pink), Purple Magic (dark purple), Plum Magic (fuchsia pink), Moonlight Magic (white) and Midnight Magic (dark pink). Coral Magic and Purple Magic have reddish new foliage in spring. Plum Magic has plum-purple foliage in spring. Midnight Magic has purple-maroon foliage that persists from spring to fall. And Moonlight Magic has dark maroon foliage that persists from spring to fall. These are semi-dwarf plants (6-10 feet tall at maturity for Coral, Purple and Plum, while Midnight matures at 4-6 feet and Moonlight matures at 8-12 feet) and were developed by Mike Dirr in Georgia at Plant Introductions, Inc. The Princess series is a new dwarf group developed by Dow Whiting at Garden Adventures Nursery in Missouri and is being marketed as part of the Garden Debut program by Greenleaf Nursery. This series includes Holly Ann (cherry red), Kylie (magenta pink), Zoey (cherry red with cotton candy pink), Jaden (lavender) and Lyla (rose pink). Ball Ornamentals has the new Enduring Summer collection of crape myrtles. Cultivars are Enduring Summer Red, Enduring Summer Fuchsia, Enduring Summer Pink, Enduring Summer White and Enduring Summer Lavender. These plants were also developed by Mike Dirr. These are reported to have re-blooming characteristics. The Enduring Summer cultivars have an upright habit, and mature height is 5-6 feet with a 4 1/2-foot spread. At the LSU AgCenter, we also have plants of Bayou View, which is the Lagerstreomia fauriei national champion single-trunk crape myrtle tree located at Akin’s Nursery in Shreveport. We are also evaluating several lavender-flowered crape myrtles in cooperation with John Davy at Panhandle Growers in Florida. For more information: Barnyard Collection – http://gardenersconfidence.com/ Razzle Dazzle – http://gardenersconfidence.com/ Enduring Summer – www.ballornamentals.com Black Diamond – www.blackdiamondblooms.com and www.jberrynursery.com Ebony – http://www.ars.usda.gov/SP2UserFiles/Place/64040500/CrapeMyrtle_ReleaseNotices.pdf Early Bird – www.southernlivingplants.com Delta – www.southernlivingplants.com Magic – www.firsteditionsplants.com Princess – www.gardendebut.com Get It Growing News Articles for June 2014 (from Dan Gill and Rick Bogren) Harvesting Vegetables Properly – June 6 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/June/get-it-growing/Harvesthomegrown-vegetables-properly-.htm Crape Myrtles Still Popular – June 13 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/June/get-it-growing/Crape-myrtlesremain-a-Louisiana-favorite-.htm Caterpillars – June 20 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/June/get-it-growing/Sometimes-youmust-deal-with-caterpillars-.htm Pineapples – June 27 http://www.lsuagcenter.com/news_archive/2014/June/get-it-growing/Grow-your-ownsweet-juicy-pineapple-.htm LDAF Press Release – Growing Ornamental Cotton All cotton planted in the state, including cotton grown in ornamental gardens and other non-traditional locations, must be registered with the state to be monitored for possible boll weevil presence. State boll weevil eradication law provides that anyone who intends to plant cotton for non-commercial purposes must receive prior permission from the Commissioner of Agriculture and Forestry, Mike Strain, D.V.M. “The state is officially boll weevil-free, but we must monitor all cotton grown in the state to protect Louisiana’s cotton industry,” Strain said. “Boll weevil traps are set along the edges of cotton fields, but gardeners outside traditional cotton-growing areas may plant cotton, for example, to spin their own thread for fabric. Gardeners may also grow cotton for its ornamental appeal. If so, we have to place a boll weevil trap nearby to be sure we preserve our boll weevil-free status.” Historically, the boll weevil has been cotton’s most destructive pest. All cotton-growing states have eradication programs. Cotton remains one of Louisiana’s leading crops. Although only 126,647 acres of cotton were harvested in 2013, record yields were achieved and the total value of the crop was set at almost $148 million. For more information regarding planting of non-commercial or ornamental cotton, please contact the Louisiana Boll Weevil Eradication Program office at 225-922-1338 or [email protected]. Trial Gardens – New Deja Bloom Azaleas from J Berry Nursery (from Allen Owings) New Deja Bloom azaleas arrived today from J Berry Nursery. Multi-seasonal bloomers. Pinkadilly, Fuschia Parasol, Pink Ribbons, Pink Jewel, Cherry Pinata and Red Tiara. Great new garden additions. Trial Gardens – More Japanese Maple Additions Four new Japanese maple cultivars for the garden trials at the LSU AgCenter Hammond Research Station were received from J Berry Nursery this week. Here is Carlis Corner Broom. Others are Kinran, Seirya and Whitney Red. Our Japanese maple collection/cultivar trial now numbers 105. We will be adding an additional 50-75 varieties this year and 50 varieties in 2015. LSU AgCenter Plant Diagnostic Clinic LSU AgCenter Soil Testing and Plant Analysis Lab
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