Also receive the 蜜桃恋人 Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Shasta Daisies
ADVERTISEMENT
Will wait for your reply. What is best way to stop them from vole damage?
Many of my daisies have "split" heads, where there are two fully formed centers that are connected in the middle (like if you split two eggs but left them a little conjoined). I thought it was just 1 head until I started looking and there are many of them. What is this?!
I bought some full grown Daises a month ago, but all stems are yellow and pale now, the fully blossomed flowers dried out and fell. The weather is getting a bit hot here now but I water them daily and they are already in Compost soil. What should I do?
Your shasta daisies were probably forced for spring-seasonal sales. These are typically late summer bloomers. Read above. By 鈥渞eturn every spring鈥 that means sprout. They would mature and flower later in season. As you can imagine, their seasonal cycle went haywire when they bloomed for spring. You can try to correct that, but it might take a year or two. Retrieve the plants from the compost (if the roots are intact) and put them into the ground or in a pot. Water them normally, not daily. Plants, unlike people, do not need constant hydration in hot conditions. Please understand that there is no guarantee that these plants will come back but you will never know if you do not try. (You can also purchase a new plant, one that is/was not forced.) We hope this helps.
We had a bed of shasta daisies planted (professionally although not sure that necessarily means correctly) two years ago. Beautiful flowers the first spring. The next spring I fertilized as I read I was supposed to, and only got a few random blooms and barely any stems at all. Now, in NC it has been warm, and there are no signs of shoots starting yet. Any advice? I don't think I have had them long enough to split them, but not sure why they only bloomed the first year. Thanks!!
There are, apparently, several varieties of shasta daisy. You might want to contact your professionals and ask what you have. The only other thing we can think of is pH. Sources vary; we’ve seen recommendations from 6.0 to 8.0; another suggests less than 7.0. Could it be that your fertilizer contained too much of the N, the P, or the K? As contrasted with, say, a balanced fertilizer? Does your soil have good drainage? They do not like to stand in water. Those would be our considerations …
A friend shared lots of Shasta daisies and black eyed Susans about 8 years ago. Every spring they returned and I had a glorious flower bed. 2 years ago the shastas did not return but susans did. I am heart broken to lose these wonderful flowers. Do shastas have a life span? I live in zone 7 and they were in full sun.
I suspect the black eyed Susans pushed out the Shasta Daisies. They seem to be very greedy for space (at least in my beds) and I've lost other plants when they took over.
If the central portion of the shasta daisy clump begins to die out, that’s a cue that it’s time to divide. Normally, this plant needs to be divided every few years to maintain its vigor. The best time to do this is spring, but this is a tough perennial so you could probably try any time of year as long as you avoid the hottest periods of summer.
Is it too late already to sow Shasta daisy seeds in Houston (zone 9)? If not, is it better to direct sow outside, or give them a chance a germinate in pots first? Thanks.