Date: Fri 19-Jul-1996
Date: Fri 19-Jul-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A10
Quick Words:
Gardener-Bleach-sunflower
Full Text:
(Suburban Gardener column on sunflowers, 7/19/96)
Suburban Gardener-
Instant Sunshine!
By Anthony C. Bleach
An enormous, hairy plant beneath the maple, growing with wheat, oats and
others, looks strange. It was a sunflower: The seed had dropped from the bird
feeder. Of course it is a weed, a plant out of place, but the flower should be
interesting so it can stay for now.
Shepherd's Garden Seeds told me you can still sow sunflowers and get a good
show before frost. Yes!, Cosmos too, spectacular and easy. Shepherd's has four
new ones bred in Holland, and I agree with the description, "in unique shapes
and glowing colors."
Sow sunflower seeds two inches deep and 18 inches apart in a sunny part of the
border. Water seedlings regularly and, when they are tall types, feed
sparingly with a liquid fertilizer when they are at the two-foot mark. Avoid
splashing water or fertilizer solution onto stems or leaves.
Tall sunflowers may need staking with canes and string if the site is exposed
or windy. Low-growing types suit the middle or the front of the border.
Although children enjoy the sky-reaching nature of traditional sunflowers, the
knee- or child-high forms, such as Big Smile or the double-flowered Teddy
Bear, can be more appreciated.
Before it became popular in gardens, the sunflower was grown primarily for
food and medicine. The Hopi, Ojibwa and Hidsara used parts of the plant for
ointments; seeds were used for cooking; the flour was used to thicken soups,
and the petals gave colors for dyeing.
Its cultivation in the Southwest is documented as far back as 3000 BC. Spanish
conquistadors brought back seeds to the Botanical Gardens in Madrid around
1510. Its nutritional value was rediscovered in Russia, where butter and other
animal fats are traditionally banned by the church at Lent.
It was improved as a plant, and modest wild flowers were transformed into
giants, with seed heads like flower plates. In 1870, Mennonite immigrants
brought back the sunflower to Canada, when it was known as Mammoth Russian. In
the meantime, Colonial American settlers were planting them around their
houses, not for ornament but as protection against malaria.
Although sun yellow is the essential sunflower color, new varieties give
greater versatility: Italian White, with creamy colored flower, can cool hot
colors; Velvet Queen, with velvet red petals and chocolate centers, and Prado
Red give sumptuous effects at the back of the border; and Pastiche, with its
mixed shades of reds, yellows and buffs, is perfect for blending and
separating color.
Pollen-free sunflowers were introduced in 1988 by the Japanese seed company
Sakata Seed Corporation. They were bred for flower arrangers as sunflower
pollen stains petals, textiles and anything it touches.
The pollen-free strains are usually on much shorter stems, which again
increases their versatility. These include Big Smile, Full Sun, Sonja and
Music Box, which won the Fleuroselect Quality Award in Europe.
(Anthony C. Bleach coordi nates the horticulture degree program at Naugatuck
Valley Community-Technical College in Waterbury.)
