Photo Credit
Junko Nishimoto/Shutterstock
Subhead
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Dazzling Dahlias from Spring to Fall
Read Next
Types
There are about 60,000 named varieties and 18 official flower forms, including cactus, peony, anemone, stellar, collarette, and waterlily. Here are some popular choices:
- ‘Bishop of Llandaff’: small, scarlet, intense flowers; handsome, dark-burgundy foliage; 3 feet tall
- ‘Miss Rose Fletcher’: an elegant, spiky, pink cactus plant with 6-inch globes of long, quilled, shell-pink petals; 4 feet tall. These are beautiful as cut flowers.
- ‘Bonne Esperance’, aka ‘Good Hope’: dwarf variety that bears 1-1/2-inch, rosy-pink flowers all summer that are reminiscent of Victorian bedding dahlias; 1 foot tall. These are great for containers and borders and are prolific bloomers.
- ‘Kidd’s Climax’: the ultimate in irrational beauty with 10-inch “dinnerplate” flowers with hundreds of pink petals suffused with gold; 3-1/2 feet tall. This is one of our favorite cutting varieties!
- ‘Jersey’s Beauty’: 4- to 6-inch hand-sized pink flowers in fall; 4 to 6 feet tall
We recommend checking out the National Dahlia Society for more information about specific varieties.

Gardening Products
More Like This
I have my Dahlias in raised beds. they are about 18 inches apart and were of various colors.They are all coming up purple this year.Can this be reversed and what caused it?





Comments