Photo Credit
Pixabay
Subhead
Sunshine on a Stem: Learn Why to Add These Sunny Blooms to Your Garden!
Read Next
Types
Marigolds have been stereotyped, but they offer tremendous variety. Both the American and French marigolds are generally aromatic, too, although some folks find the scent to be a bit overwhelming. Keep that in mind when choosing a planting site.
Marigolds have daisy- or carnation-like flower heads produced singly or in clusters. Although there are some 50 species, most we see in the garden are one of the following:
- Tagetes erecta (aka African marigolds, American marigolds, or Mexican marigolds): This species is the tallest and most upright marigold, reaching 3 to 4 feet in height and producing large, full flowers. According to Nate Dalman of the University of Minnesota Extension, “Despite the names, African marigolds did not originate in Africa; instead they are called that because they were first imported to Europe via a trade route that passed through northwest Africa.” They’re native to Mexico and Central America and will thrive even under drought-like conditions.
- T. patula (aka French marigolds): This species tends to be smaller, bushier, and more compact than T. erecta. They are often wider than they are tall. Elegant and eye-catching, they have relatively demure flowers and usually grow from 6 inches to 2 feet tall. They are better suited to rainier conditions than the other Tagetes species.
- T. tenuifolia (aka signet marigolds): These petite marigolds do well in hot, dry sites and make for a beautiful edging plant. They rarely reach more than a foot in height.
French Marigolds (T. patula)
- ‘Little Hero’ Series: 7-inch-tall plants with large, double carnation flowers in 7 color combinations of maroon, orange, and yellow
- ‘Hero’ Series: 10-inch-tall plants with double carnations, large (2-inch-wide) flowers in 7 different combinations of yellow, orange, and maroon
- ‘Bonanza’ Series: 2-inch-wide, double carnation flowers in 5 different combinations of yellow, orange, and maroon on bushy, compact 8-inch-tall plants
- ‘Aurora’ Series: 1-foot-tall plants with wide-petaled, anemone-like flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange
- ‘Janie’ Series: Early blooming. 8-inch-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-inch-tall prolifically flowering plants with flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange
American/African Marigolds (T. erecta)
- ‘Jubilee’ Series: 2-foot-tall plants with dense, double flowers in shades of yellow and orange
- ‘Gold Coin’ Series: 1½- to 2-foot-tall plants with large (5-inch-wide) double blooms in gold, yellow, and orange
- ‘Safari’ Series: 1-foot-tall plants with flat-topped, large flowers in shades of maroon, yellow, and orange
- ‘French Vanilla’: 3-inch-wide flowers are pure creamy white; minimal scent; 1½ to 2 feet tall
Where to Buy Marigolds
Gardening Products
More Like This
For the last 5 years I have kept many seeds from the marigold plants I grow. I have 3 tall kinds but don't remember the varity, two of the types are luminacent, one an orange and the other a yellow. I have picked and dried them and get enough to fill a 5 gallon bucket half full of dried seeds. What I do is take and toss them about in my gardens and come up what may. I just thin them out whre I want to plant crops. This the second year now I have had NO aphids and other bad bugs in the garden. I roto-till the plants into the soil in the fall so it seems to be working. They are very beautiful still. This year I kept more seeds than in the past.
Each summer dropped Marigold seeds sprout in my flower bed and the leaves do not look like Marigold plants and the blooms are horrible looking. What is wrong with them?
Your original marigolds may have been hybrids. Their seed does not always grow true to the original plant.
This Spring for the first time ever, I followed your advice and put Marigolds among my tomato plants. Guess what ! I suppose this worked because in years past we have been over run with tomato worms that ate our plants vigorously and this year we have had NONE at all (worms that is) but have had a bountiful crop of tomatos. Thanks for all the tips. I will pay more attention in future to what you tell us and will use your wisdom for my own good.




Comments