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Old 27-05-2005, 04:03 PM
junkyardcat
 
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Default Larkspur

I bought this beautiful big Larkspur at Lowe's on Mothers Day (and it wasn't
cheap either!). It's now planted in my butterfly garden in full sun, and it
looks ill. About half the leaves from the bottom to the middle of the stalk
are turning brown and dropping off. Are larkspurs hard to grow? Do they need
lots of water, not as much water...fertilizer? Help!

Angie in the Boonies of East Texas (where we have seen NO rain for over 2
months


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Old 28-05-2005, 03:52 PM
junkyardcat
 
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Thanks for that info! Wish I would've known that when I spent that much
money on it, LOL! Oh well...I'll harvest the seeds and sprinkle them like
you do and have beautiful flowers next Spring

Thanks again!

Angie



"Bourne Identity" wrote in message
...
Larkspurs are a spring blooming, cool weather annual. Mine have been

blooming
for many months now and they are browning up and going to seed. Daily I

go out
and harvest the seed pods and in the fall I sprinkle them out again for

next
years spring blooming. They do not last much past May or early June up

north.
Down here in TX they are starting to melt now.



On Fri, 27 May 2005 10:03:39 -0500, "junkyardcat"


opined:

I bought this beautiful big Larkspur at Lowe's on Mothers Day (and it

wasn't
cheap either!). It's now planted in my butterfly garden in full sun, and

it
looks ill. About half the leaves from the bottom to the middle of the

stalk
are turning brown and dropping off. Are larkspurs hard to grow? Do they

need
lots of water, not as much water...fertilizer? Help!

Angie in the Boonies of East Texas (where we have seen NO rain for over 2
months




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Old 29-05-2005, 02:47 AM
Sue in Western Maine
 
Posts: n/a
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Angie,

I'd have to wonder... since you paid a lot of money for this Larkspur..
whether it was really the Annual Larkspur, or what we know in the
Northeast as a Delphinium.

Here in the Northeast, the two are separate, Larkspur is known as an annual
which will re-seed itself. Delphinium is a perennial which will bloom in
early spring, set seed and reseed , but come back from the original crown
for many years.

Sue
Western Maine



"junkyardcat" wrote in message
...
Thanks for that info! Wish I would've known that when I spent that much
money on it, LOL! Oh well...I'll harvest the seeds and sprinkle them like
you do and have beautiful flowers next Spring

Thanks again!

Angie



"Bourne Identity" wrote in message
...
Larkspurs are a spring blooming, cool weather annual. Mine have been

blooming
for many months now and they are browning up and going to seed. Daily I

go out
and harvest the seed pods and in the fall I sprinkle them out again for

next
years spring blooming. They do not last much past May or early June up

north.
Down here in TX they are starting to melt now.



On Fri, 27 May 2005 10:03:39 -0500, "junkyardcat"


opined:

I bought this beautiful big Larkspur at Lowe's on Mothers Day (and it

wasn't
cheap either!). It's now planted in my butterfly garden in full sun,

and
it
looks ill. About half the leaves from the bottom to the middle of the

stalk
are turning brown and dropping off. Are larkspurs hard to grow? Do they

need
lots of water, not as much water...fertilizer? Help!

Angie in the Boonies of East Texas (where we have seen NO rain for over

2
months






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