
The Complete Marigold Flower Guide
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Marigolds come in a range of colors—from creamy white to golden orange—and sizes. French marigold varieties tend to be smaller than American/African varieties.
French Marigolds (T. patula)
- ‘Little Hero’ Series: 7” tall plants with large, double carnation flowers in 7 color combinations of maroon, orange, and yellow.
- ‘Hero’ Series: 10” tall plants with double carnations, large (2” wide) flowers in 7 different combinations of yellow, orange, and maroon.
- ‘Bonanza’ Series: 2” wide, double carnation flowers in 5 different combinations of yellow, orange, and maroon on bushy, compact 8” tall plants.
- ‘Aurora’ Series: 1’ tall plants with wide-petaled, anemone-like flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange.
- ‘Janie’ Series: Early blooming. 8” tall plants are perfect for container growing. Double carnation type flowers in 6 different combinations of yellow, orange, and maroon.
- ‘Boy O’ Boy’ Series: 6” tall prolifically flowering plants with flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange

American/African Marigolds (T. erecta)
- ‘Jubilee’ Series: 2’ tall plants with dense, double flowers in shades of yellow and orange.
- ‘Gold Coin’ Series: 1½ to 2’ tall plants with large (5” wide) double blooms in gold, yellow, and orange.
- ‘Safari’ Series: 1’ tall plants with flat-topped, large flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange.
- ‘French Vanilla’: 3” wide flowers are pure creamy white. Minimal scent. Plants are 1½ to 2’ tall.
Cooking Notes
The flowers of Tagetes marigolds are NOT edible, but those of Calendula are. The bright petals of Calendula add color and a spicy tang to salads and other summer dishes.
- The flower petals are sometimes cooked with rice to impart saffron’s color (but, unfortunately, not flavor).
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Pinching back will create a more compact marigold. To pinch, remove the terminal bud (which is the tip of the vegetative shoot) with your fingers and also remove the first set of leaves.
Help I have 3 small pots of marigolds....they sit on my front steps. It has been hot and we water them often. But they have stopped blooming and we have deadheaded them. The foliage seems very twig like now. I don't know what to do with them. Any ideas. Thank you
Hi Debra, It sounds like something has sucked the life out of your plants. Spider mites are the number one pest of marigolds. To see if your plants are infested, shake the plants over a sheet of white paper and look for crawling dots. The mites are very tiny. You can also inspect the plants using a magnifying glass. Look for fine webs, eggs, and mites on the undersides of the leaves. If the infestation is bad - and it sounds prtetty bad if the leaves have shrivelled to twigs - the best thing to do is bag it up and remove it from your landscape so it doesn't infect your other plants.
I live in a zone 5 area and am thinking about trying to plant some marigold on my familys property. How well can/will marigolds do in the wild? Are they a high Maintenance plant.
I let the seeds from last year's marigolds co e up, very big and healthy but few blooms. What is wrong?
If your marigold isn't flowering, it's either because the weather is too hot or you've given it soil that's too rich; they prefer poor soil and soil that's too fertile or fertilized create lush leaves at the expense of blooms.
i have marigold that grow 4feet high is there any way that i can keep the short and bushey when they are tall they.i would like to have them short and fat. look so messey and out of control
As far as size goes, it could just depend on the species of marigold plant that you have. Bushy Tagetes patula species are smaller and more compact while the Tagetes erecta species is often taller. You can try to pinch them back and see if they will get bushier. Usually you only deadhead the spent flowers on marigolds.
iam an engineering student.
I love gardening and planting .
during vacations iam ready to start a roof gardening.
if anybody have some tips for me ,i will be very thankful.
Do I need to remove the dead blooms to keep the plant blooming? If so, do I cut them or pinch them off? My blooms are tiny...am I overwatering? They are in direct sun all day and it gets close to 95-98 degrees.