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benb 25-07-2006 09:13 PM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 
Hi,

I am looking for some help with my non flowering Chrysanthemums. Last year
we brought about 2 dozen 3" plants, from our local DIY store (homebase) and
planted then in windowsill trays. Come last summer, they grew to about 6"
and gave a full head of dark red flowers, and loked great. However, this
year we re-planted them into the garden boarders, in the hope of a similar
colourful display. But so far all they've done is grow & grow, to between
12-18" in hight, without any sign of buds, they are starting to take over,
and block out all the sun light from te other plants in the boarders.
Does anyone have any advice on what we've done wrong?

Many thanks

Ben



Brian[_2_] 25-07-2006 09:26 PM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 

"benb" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I am looking for some help with my non flowering Chrysanthemums. Last year
we brought about 2 dozen 3" plants, from our local DIY store (homebase)

and
planted then in windowsill trays. Come last summer, they grew to about 6"
and gave a full head of dark red flowers, and loked great. However, this
year we re-planted them into the garden boarders, in the hope of a similar
colourful display. But so far all they've done is grow & grow, to between
12-18" in hight, without any sign of buds, they are starting to take over,
and block out all the sun light from te other plants in the boarders.
Does anyone have any advice on what we've done wrong?

Many thanks

Ben

~~~~~~~~~~
You have done nothing wrong. You were not to know that the plants
bought last year had been treated to flower early and smaller. These will
possibly bloom later but probably too late, without protection. They might
end up feet high!! Most likely quite worthless.~~ Sorry.
Best Wishes Brian.





JoeSpareBedroom 25-07-2006 10:00 PM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 
"benb" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I am looking for some help with my non flowering Chrysanthemums. Last year
we brought about 2 dozen 3" plants, from our local DIY store (homebase)
and planted then in windowsill trays. Come last summer, they grew to about
6" and gave a full head of dark red flowers, and loked great. However,
this year we re-planted them into the garden boarders, in the hope of a
similar colourful display. But so far all they've done is grow & grow, to
between 12-18" in hight, without any sign of buds, they are starting to
take over, and block out all the sun light from te other plants in the
boarders.
Does anyone have any advice on what we've done wrong?

Many thanks

Ben


As Brian said, they are late bloomers, and growers will sometimes manipulate
their light to make them look more saleable in the stores. You didn't
mention where you live, but here in upstate NY (zone 5/6, depending on
luck), they bloom in early September, and if dead flowers are removed,
they'll continue up until frost. Be patient, and give them some thick mulch
(straw, shredded bark) in the fall. They don't always survive the frost.
Here, they are more successful if planted near the house, where the
foundation warms up earlier than the rest of the yard.



benb 26-07-2006 09:40 AM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 
"Brian" --- 'flayb' to respond wrote in message
...

~~~~~~~~~~
You have done nothing wrong. You were not to know that the plants
bought last year had been treated to flower early and smaller. These will
possibly bloom later but probably too late, without protection. They
might
end up feet high!! Most likely quite worthless.~~ Sorry.
Best Wishes Brian.


Hi Brian,

Thanks for the reply.

Damn those home improvement stores!

I might pull them up now, if they are worthless. They are taking over
everything else, and stopping the light getting through, found a load of
yellow leaved bedding plants underneath them at the weekend :-(

Ben



benb 26-07-2006 09:45 AM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 

"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message
...

As Brian said, they are late bloomers, and growers will sometimes
manipulate their light to make them look more saleable in the stores. You
didn't mention where you live, but here in upstate NY (zone 5/6, depending
on luck), they bloom in early September, and if dead flowers are removed,
they'll continue up until frost. Be patient, and give them some thick
mulch (straw, shredded bark) in the fall. They don't always survive the
frost. Here, they are more successful if planted near the house, where the
foundation warms up earlier than the rest of the yard.


Hi Joe,

We're in the UK, south-west. If this year is anything like last year, we
won't get the first frost until late October, (although who knows what's
going to happen with the current weather conditions), so maybe there is
still time for them to flower.
I can't remember what happened to them last year, whether we left them out
or put them in the garage. I seem to have this image of them still being on
the windowsills when we got the first snow in February. I think they either
rotted or got cut down to the stumps, but then started re-growing in early
March.

Ben



JoeSpareBedroom 26-07-2006 11:46 AM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 
"benb" wrote in message
...

"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message
...

As Brian said, they are late bloomers, and growers will sometimes
manipulate their light to make them look more saleable in the stores. You
didn't mention where you live, but here in upstate NY (zone 5/6,
depending on luck), they bloom in early September, and if dead flowers
are removed, they'll continue up until frost. Be patient, and give them
some thick mulch (straw, shredded bark) in the fall. They don't always
survive the frost. Here, they are more successful if planted near the
house, where the foundation warms up earlier than the rest of the yard.


Hi Joe,

We're in the UK, south-west. If this year is anything like last year, we
won't get the first frost until late October, (although who knows what's
going to happen with the current weather conditions), so maybe there is
still time for them to flower.
I can't remember what happened to them last year, whether we left them out
or put them in the garage. I seem to have this image of them still being
on the windowsills when we got the first snow in February. I think they
either rotted or got cut down to the stumps, but then started re-growing
in early March.

Ben


Some of the best books about plants come from the UK, for obvious reasons.
You should buy some, or borrow some from the library. There's a lot to like
about mums, and methods (which involve) work for maximizing their blooming,
but you'll need to read about these things. It would be inappropriate for
anyone to type all of it here.



Derryl Killan 03-08-2006 07:56 PM

Non Flowering Chrysanthemums
 
Hi Benb

Chrysanthemums are short day plants and will flower later into
the autumn.

Derryl Killan
Horticulturist
Calgary

enb wrote:
Hi,

I am looking for some help with my non flowering Chrysanthemums. Last year
we brought about 2 dozen 3" plants, from our local DIY store (homebase) and
planted then in windowsill trays. Come last summer, they grew to about 6"
and gave a full head of dark red flowers, and loked great. However, this
year we re-planted them into the garden boarders, in the hope of a similar
colourful display. But so far all they've done is grow & grow, to between
12-18" in hight, without any sign of buds, they are starting to take over,
and block out all the sun light from te other plants in the boarders.
Does anyone have any advice on what we've done wrong?

Many thanks

Ben




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