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Hollyhocks
Hollyhocks
Q. I bought a hollyhock which was supposed
to be pink but on the same plant I got both
pink and dark purple/black flowers! Would
you explain this please?
A. What you have experienced is a sport of nature! It happens a lot naturally and that is one way we get new and improved varieties of fruits
flowers trees
shrubs and vegetables. Simply put it happens when the cells are dividing and all of a sudden one or more of them change to a different colors. This can result in a different color of flower and/or foliage. The variegated foliage of African violets arose from such a sport. So did the new colors which added to the range of purple-pink-white. Many times one plant will be totally different from its siblings. Other times
as you have experienced only a portion of the plant will be different. You can have a bed of pink flowers and one plant will be purple
or 1/2 of one will be different It is nothing that you did
not poor care or fertilizer water or sunlight. So
enjoy what we call a Fluke of Nature.
Q. This is the first year I've had 'Chater's
Prize' hollyhocks. They are lovely but only
2 out of 6 healthy plants have sent up stalks.
I planted them last summer all treated equally.
Someone told me that if you deadhead them
that they will put out new blossoms.
A. Yes it is a recommended practice. I do not know why your hollyhocks have not bloomed by now. This is pretty late. Have you been watering and feeding them regularly? Check the food label and make sure it is for blooming plants
with a higher middle number in the formula. Also are they getting nearly full sun? Removing spent flowers
or deadheading is a form of pruning that will tidy once-blooming plants and encourage repeat bloomers to flower again. Cut the stem of a faded flower stalk back to about 1/4 inch above the nearest leaf. If you have not gotten any flowers on those particular stalks
then cut back about 6" of the stem back to a good healthy leaf with an axillary bud.
These members of the mallow family prefer
sun or partial shade and deeply fertile
soil with good drainage. Plant seeds about
an eighth of an inch deep this fall and
they'll germinate in about two weeks.
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