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Let's read about this Annual Flower
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PETUNIA
(Named
from petun, Brazilian name for tobacco, to which
Petunia is allied)
Every
one has some room for Petunias because they are the
most profuse flowering of any annual. Few other annuals
produce so many of such large flowers. The colors have
been improved to such an extent that there are now varieties
to please us all. Recently nearly clear blues have been
produced; the deep, rich purples and vioLet's are superb;
the light pinks are dainty; the whites are showy; the
striped sorts are fantastic; the giant doubles are marvels
of the breeder's art; the frilled sorts are popular-but
why continue farther) The Petunias are altogether satisfactory.
Petunias as cultivated are hybrids between several species,
hence the name Petunia hybrida.
Uses.
Note that the catalogs list trailing as well as bush
sorts. The former are incomparable for the hanging basket,
garden and window. The more compact varieties are unexcelled
for beds by themselves, or as wide edgings for other
plantings. Steep banks which furnish a difficult mowing
problem may be planted with Petunias.
The writer
will never forget their use in the "Garden of the Heart,"
in Central Park, New York City. The rock walls rise
on several sides of the garden and into the chinks of
these rocks Dr. Southwick had sown Petunia seed; the
resulting plants have continued to self-sow there year
after year. The flowers are small and the colors not
especially good, but as a whole, the effect is worthy
of admiration.
GENERAL.
Seeds of Petunias may be sown in the sunny window or
hotbed in March, or in the open soil in May. The plants
should always stand 9 inches apart. As the seeds are
very fine, great care is necessary in sowing and in
resisting the temptation to allow more plants to grow
than will develop properly. Someone has said that the
way to get the best single Petunias is to sow the best
doubles, because the seeds of the latter do not produce
all double flowers. The slowest and smallest seedlings
are more apt to be doubles than those are that germinate
rapidly and grow quickly. The better sorts of Petunia
seed will frequently cost more than the ordinary and
inferior strains, but they are worth the difference.
Petunias
prefer full sunlight, but will bloom in partial shade.
They will thrive in rather dry soil if this is well
enriched, and also upon soil either too rich or too
poor for most annuals, if the moisture conditions are
right. Thus one may see that the Petunia is most adaptable.
Information
on 50+ annual flowers
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