Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-03, Page 42Gardening Glads for the garden and not the funeral home Rhea Hamilton - Seeger and her husband live near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Years ago I eliminated gladioli from my garden. I was never too fond of the great showy stalks of blooms. Where I worked as a young teen, we grew them for the main house for grand bouquets in the front hall or on the sideboard in the dining room. The larger and brighter they were the better. As I grew up I saw them more and more at funerals and that was enough to turn me off. It was once considered my part of the spring ritual — sorting the corms. peeling back the papery tunics, dusting with fungicide. I would carefully look each one over and toss any that were shriveled, blackened or soft. My father would bring a basin of some foul smelling liquid that all the corms had to be soaked in before planting. It may have been a weak solution of DDT for all I know. My Dad explained it was to kill any bugs that had wintered over under the glads' papery covering. Seemed to make sense then. But glads have changed over the years and for those who liked the carnival of colour it is still there with more vibrancy and flamboyance than ever before: colours that will make any artist or gardener gasp with delight. The show or exhibition glads are taller, up to six feet, and while the taller ones need staking the smaller ones are fairly sturdy. Then there are the miniature glads that have caught my eye. Finer blooms that are ruffled, hooded or wide open, spaced out along the stems for a more informal look, they are shorter, making them more • suitable for the average home arrangement. Better breeding has made gladiolas more resistant to fusarium rot and thrips. Some gardeners pop glads into their perennial border for that wild splash of colour later in summer. You can find any colour that will complement your garden plan, but you have to be careful not to disturb other spring bulbs or perennial roots or trample shoots when digging in or digging out in the fall. Think carefully on choosing the location for light. If there is something that comes out later in the spring that will shade that particular spot then you would be better not to plant your corms there. Glads need full sun and should be planted in a rich, fast draining soil beginning when the trees start to leaf out and continuing at three week intervals until early July or 60 days before your first frost. Blooming time depends on the variety chosen. Some take as long as 120 days to bloom while others bloom in just under 80 days. Before you plant, carefully remove the papery tunics or covering and soak in a weak fertilizer solution for a day or two. Good corms have high tops; flat or concave tops are the mark of old corms. If there are any cuts or open wounds, dust with a fungicide. Plant about anywhere from three to five inches with shallower depths for the smaller corms or if in clay soil. You can apply a light fertilizer that is low in nitrogen at least an inch below the bulb or wait until it breaks the surface and top dress with a mixture of compost and bone meal, about a couple of teaspoons per bulb. There are great bulb booster mixtures on the market (9-9-6). While the bulbs are the stored food for the plant 38 THE RURAL VOICE it needs to be replenished as the plant grows in order to be viable for the next growing season. To offer added support aside from staking, you can hill the plant as the shoots break through the surface. During early growth, gladiolus must never suffer from lack of water. In time of drought soak the soil deeply every few days. Mulching helps, especially since the plants themselves cast almost no shade. After they have finished blooming, if you haven't cut the flower stalks to take inside, trim them back to two inches after the stems have begun to yellow, and dig them up carefully. Let dry in a frost free space for a week. Carefully clean off, checking for rot and disease. You can ease off the young corms growing along the base of the corm. Store in ventilated bags in a cool, but not cold, dry place. Onion bags do the trick nicely. You can increase your number of glads quite easily. To force more prolific numbers of corms trim the spent flowers to stop reproducing seeds. The small cormlets like their older counter -parts are prone to rot so plant in a free draining soil mix. To keep better track of them plant in seed flats or plastic pots. They should be covered to twice their own depth. They can be planted out in the garden as well at two to three inches apart. Grow for two to three years before expecting any blooms. Lift in the fall like you would the mature corms. Soon you will be trading with the neighbours. One final note. Get the jump on spring by planting your summer bulbs in pots about six weeks before the last frost. I have my cannas eagerly awaiting their covering of potting soil. We had planted the odd ones that didn't make it into the garden into large tubs around the patio. It was a slow start for them but they still made a great show. So this spring we are planning to start them earlier in their tubs and will enjoy their bronze foliage on the patio sooner than last year.0