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Wealden Times | WT201 | November 2018 | Gift supplement inside

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Dahlias,<br />

darling!<br />

Sue Whigham celebrates and investigates<br />

the most joyous of late bloomers<br />

Whether the name ‘dahlia’ was bestowed by the great<br />

Carl Linnaeus himself – the Swedish botanist,<br />

physician, and zoologist who formalised ‘binomial<br />

nomenclature’, the modern system of naming organisms<br />

- after one of his students, Swedish botanist, Anders<br />

Dahl, is in question as the great man died in 1778, eleven<br />

years before the plant was introduced into Europe.<br />

It seems most likely that the first attempt to define the<br />

genus was made by Abbe Cavanilles, Director of the Royal<br />

Gardens of Madrid, who received the first specimens from<br />

Mexico in the early 1790’s. However, what is certainly<br />

known is that the species originates in Central and South<br />

America and in particular, Mexico,<br />

where dahlias are the National Flower.<br />

Their natural habit is rather unlike the<br />

conditions we give them in that they come<br />

from cool, damp mountain slopes. Imagine<br />

seeing the lavender flowered species, Dahlia<br />

imperialis, growing to its full height of up to<br />

ten metres on the hillsides of Guatemala…<br />

The chance of that particular plant<br />

flowering in this country is limited so we<br />

have to content ourselves with growing that one for its<br />

dramatic height and foliage, but with 42 species of dahlias<br />

and innumerable hybrids – up to 50,000 and still countingwe<br />

have a wonderful array of choice of this jolliest of flower.<br />

What other bloom is so varied and so much fun as a late<br />

season border plant? I was reading the Frustrated Gardener<br />

blog this morning which is worth subscribing to and the<br />

author Dan Cooper (whose Broadstairs garden is small, hence<br />

the title of his blog) and I particularly like his description<br />

of a ‘drama of dahlias’ for that is what they bring to a<br />

garden with their fantastically rich colours and forms.<br />

We’ve got two of the species varieties growing in a<br />

large pot here, one of which is D. coccinea var. palmeri,<br />

“Dan Pearson<br />

describes local flower<br />

shows as a child where<br />

the dahlias were the<br />

domain of men in<br />

string vests”<br />

and I can’t tell you how often we’re drawn to go out and<br />

admire the intensity of its burnt orange petals in the early<br />

evening sun combined with delicately filigree leaves. I<br />

like the single flowered varieties such as this particularly<br />

as they are, of course, bee friendly. And whilst the ball<br />

varieties, also firm favourites, with their intense spiral<br />

arrangement of incurved petals are lovely, any pollinating<br />

insect would be pushed to make any headway with them.<br />

I wanted to know a little more about the secrets of success<br />

with growing dahlias with an eye to improving on this year’s<br />

limited success. Mind you, it hasn’t been the ideal year. Even<br />

Monty Don admitted that his dahlias haven’t been as usual<br />

and he put it down to lack of water in<br />

June. All the more reason to look ahead<br />

to next season, so I popped into see Dave<br />

Izzard whose front garden in Wittersham<br />

is always a picture in dahlia season and<br />

causes many a dahlia loving driver to lose<br />

concentration for a moment or two!<br />

He was so accommodating and not<br />

only showed me his plants but talked me<br />

through what he does to produce such<br />

fantastic blooms and how he got started. It seems that thirty<br />

years ago he joined the Parish Council and was given the<br />

job of looking after the planting around the War Memorial.<br />

Luckily for him somebody in the village offered him dahlia<br />

plants which did well and that was it. He was hooked!<br />

He tends to get his tubers from Halls of Heddon who have<br />

a very comprehensive list. They offer 10 to 13 centimetres<br />

pots containing a tuber grown for a full season before it is<br />

sold. This ensures that it is healthy and compact. They are<br />

available from December through to February and arrive in<br />

little polystyrene sleeves in vermiculite for you to start off.<br />

Dave cuts back his dahlias when the frost gets to them or<br />

when they “start looking embarrassing”. I know it is a good<br />

<br />

159 wealdentimes.co.uk

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