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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 and instead 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. Plants are 1½ to 2 feet tall.
Where to Buy Marigolds
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I keep my egg shells, bake them and crush them up. I either feed them to my chickens (helps strengthen their new eggs) or generously sprinkle them around any plants that snails or slugs eat. For these little creatures, it's the equivalent of walking on broken glass.
For slugs, we have long recommended the beer trap: Pour cheap beer into a shallow saucer or jar lid (use a few if the problem is severe). In the area where the slugs are abundant, set the container into the ground at lip level (so a bit buried; note that it might be easier to pour the beer in once the container is set, not before). Come back the next day. You should find that slugs have drowned in the beer. Discard them and the liquid. Repeat.
Some sources this is equally effective on snails. It certainly is cheap.
Be aware, too, though that other sources suggest that marigolds a slug/snail magnets. You might develop a new favorite flower …
I read once that salt can work to kill and detour snails, slugs & frogs. It's sad, but it apparently burns & dehydrates their skin once they come in contact with it and if there isnt any standing water around for them to retreat back to it kills them.
Because my neighbor who has a marygold before was died and she said because we live in a desert so they won't survive. Which is I can't understand. Thank you so much for the advice. I Really appreciate it. I will do what you said to help them survive.
I got African Marygolds in Home depot for about 3 weeks now they were in a container and I transferred them in a big pot and I deadheaded them today. My only question is since I got them during spring season and I am new in Southwest NV my neighbor has been told me that they will die. Is this true? Looking forward for your response. Thanks.
The African Marigold, like other marigolds, is an annual, so it will die. Sometime. More than that, we have no idea what your neighbor was referring to.
But you want it to survive and it should: it thrives under hot, dry conditions (that means do not give it too much water!)
Here’s some more info on the plant in general: http://www.gardening.cornell.edu/homegardening/scene415d.html
And here’s information from a local (Nevada) cooperative extension about a wide variety of plants for your conditions: https://www.unce.unr.edu/publications/files/ho/2001/sp0115.pdf
I heard you shouldn't touch a Marigold plant, is this true? Why would this be an issue if so?
Yes, you can touch a marigold! Usually, the soft touch approach is best in life, even with marigolds. :-)
why do my marigolds die so fast
A number of things could be killing your plants. Some common problems include watering them from the top/overhead. This, and/or a lot of rain, can lead to white mold fungus. Water lightly at ground level. Planting them in dirty, or infected, pots/containers. Root rot can be a problem. Spider mites can devastate plants in hot, dry weather. Every year is an experiment. Keep trying.