There's a Difference Between Florist and Garden Mums
Fall Flowers and Foliage
Fall Vegetable Gardening
Fall Garden Cleanup
Garden Soil Preparation
Fall Nature
ADVERTISEMENT
Great info re mums. Now I know when, how & winterizing mums! Thank you!
I have big beautiful mums in pots on my front
Porch. I want to plant them but know it鈥檚
Too late in the season. If I keep them in my garage all winter and keep them watered, can I play them early spring?
Brought my beautiful Mum indoors last week hoping to keep it before I took it to the cool dark basement for the winter. There are lots and lots of tiny tiny flies that accumulate on the nearest window. I took the plant back outside for a day and sprayed it with flying insect spray but the next day the flies were back. There seems to be more of them the day after I water the plant. What are these and how can I get rid of them?
It sounds like you could be dealing with fungus gnats or a similar gnat. These tiny flies are commonly found in houseplants or outdoor plants grown in greenhouses or large-scale nurseries. Luckily, they are mostly harmless, although they are annoying. Keep the plant away from your other indoor plants for now, as the gnats can easily move from plant to plant and lay eggs in the soil. See our fungus gnats pest page to read more about dealing with them.
I planted mums last fall and not only did they last, they actually thrives, most even doubling in size - and I bought full sized mature plants to start with. They started filling out with blossoms around June and have been in full bloom since as long as I dead-head them. My mom also planted mums several years ago and they come back every year and bloom beautifully. We鈥檝e had many single digit winter days and even more nights. All we do is soak the ground well and then heavily mulch just before the first frost. I guess we just got lucky - or have very green thumbs. lol
Funny I live in Iowa and my mum's were on the north side of the house.They over wintered just fine no special care for winter.fertilized in spring and they grew into huge bushes! Still were growing when we sold the house.
Well over 40 years ago, my husband was given a pot of mums while in the hospital. We planted it on the south side of the house and it thrived. A few years later when we moved to our little farm, the mums, now spread out into many plants, came with us, again to be planted on the south side of the house and other places in the yard. I am writing this on September 19, 2018, and these mums are still hardy and getting ready to bloom. They bloom only once in the fall and later than my other mums(and,yes, I do have other mums that are years old) which bloom throughout the summer. I do nothing special to these mums except basic care of watering and mulching...have no idea why they have lived so long other than they know they are loved! By the way, I'm in northeast Mississippi.
Good to know about your flower plants .Now I will ask my aunt (ms Ramla Bahadur) to grow these flowers as she has a beautiful house in Greenwood miss .
Buffalo, New York, so yes, it gets cold. I never attempted mums in the ground for the reasons stated in the article. But I've been keeping potted mums alive for 3 years, which is at least a full year longer than they should ever live. Some only make it one more season, some make it 2, but some actually bloom a third time. I currently have 2 pots that are blooming, probably for their last year. I buy some unopened mums in early October and put them in terra cotta or a quality, heavy duty plastic pot, using decent potting soil. After they open and the flowers fade near the end of the month, I leave them outside until the first big frost. As I put my garden to bed for the winter, I chop the mums down, then put the pots in the unheated garage. In April, I bring them out into the sun and water. Usually it takes about 2 weeks to see new green. If there is no green in 3 weeks, that particular mum is done. Mums grow slowly over the summer. You won't get flowers until about September, at least in northern latitudes. Every few years, I need new mums to replace the old. People just throw out the mums after autumn. Don't waste them if you want them next year! I don't know why some of mine last 3 seasons. 2 is expected. 3 is just cool!
I live in southeastern Louisiana. Mums aren't even out in any garden centers here yet. It is mid-July. Is it safe to say that when I see them in the garden centers, I can buy the mature, flowering mums and plant them? I think your article was only meant for northern states, right?