Photo Credit
seaonweb/shutterstock
Subhead
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Delphinium
Read Next
Types
Delphiniums are hardy in Zones 3 to 7. Most varieties today are not wild but the result of hybridization since the 19th century. Dwarf-, medium-size, and tall (6 feet and up) hybrids are available:
- Belladonna Group: blue flowers native to North America; easier to grow and longer-lived than varieties in the Elatum Group (below); upright, loose, and branching perennials; secondary flower spikes extend bloom period into autumn; 3 to 4 feet tall. ‘Blue Donna’ has clear, blue flowers.
- Elatum Group: tallest varieties in shades of violet, blue, pink, and/or white; short-lived; reach 6 feet tall or more. ‘Aurora Deep Purple’ has purple flowers with a white center.
- Pacific Hybrids: 3-inch violet, blue, and pink flowers; short-lived; tolerate warm/hot climates as annuals; giant (3- to 6-foot) heirlooms and dwarf hybrids. ‘King Arthur’, 5 to 6 feet tall, has plum flowers with white centers.
Gardening Products
More Like This
After reading this I see I need to cut my plants back or stake them (due to the height). However I have been cutting them off, and putting them in water hoping for rooting to occur, and replanting them elsewhere. WHY DOES THE CUT DELPHINIUM NOT ROOT in WATER? Is there anyway to get the cut back piece to root? Please respond via email ASAP, as I have several batches in water that wont last much longer, and I need to plant them if this is possible...Thanks for your time.
Lori, IL, USA
You can propagate delphiniums by basal cuttings, but you need to include part of the brown callus material at the base of the stem. A 3- to 4-inch cutting in early spring or just after flowering is good. Then, you can place them in about an inch of water, or dip them in rooting hormone and place them in sand, perlite, or other light mix. Moisten the mix. If in rooting medium, place a plastic bag over the cutting (prop the bag up with stakes). Place the cutting in a bright, cool, humid area, about 50 or so degrees Fahrenheit. Rooting should occur in about 3 or 4 weeks.
If your cuttings do not have that brown base to them, I'm not sure that they will root. You might try dipping them in rooting hormone and placing them in rooting medium to experiment.
I have the same problem this year. Last year, I split my 3-4 year old guardian/black night? Dark blue delphinium in two large halves, so I could keep it healthy and more manageable (it was shorter last year when it bloomed and was expanding horizontally, and getting to heavy for the looser I had replaced it with, so it sank on the Back half and took the ground support box and stake with it!) I left the first half in the same spot. I used a tiny amount of clay with miracle grow when I covered it up and watered it. The second half I planted 4-5 ft. Away and used a milk water miracle grow solution to cover that half up. The original half hasn't come back this year. The transplanted half it back and as strong, healthy and tall as my new Pacific giant delphinium I planted last year. I planted 3 new pepsin isms decided the old one and left my second guardian blue/blue black night? 3 year old plant alone. Now, I Pacific giant delphinium is coming up and the second half of my old delphinium is coming up. I planted them all about 2 feet apart and I have a feeling that the huge second half of the old delphinium ended up really taking over and out growing the babies and older plant? Does this happen? All were doing good last year. Nice green foliage the surviving baby plant had even put out a tiny bloom but it's about 3 ft away from the huge second root chunk.????
South western, NE, us. Zone 3
Are they deer resistant? We have a herd that comes thru and eats on our clover...
I am searching for information on delphiniums and what variety might be best to try for my Midwest (Iowa) zone. It sounds like a dwarf variety might be less finicky! Thanks to everyone who comments.
My mom lived in central Iowa and had a dwarf delphinium. The packaging stated it would have a life span of 5-7 years and would grow to approximately 2-3 feet tall. It grew about 4-5 feet tall each year (the first two were shorter) and lived over a decade. It probably would have gone longer had she lived to continue caring for it. Gorgeous plant each year and blooms lasted a long time.
I have newly potted delphiniums putting out flowering spikes. Should I pinch back or allow to flower?
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- …
- 10
- Next »


Comments