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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Delphiniums
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There are two conflicting suggestions on this page regarding the ideal soil pH for growing delphiniums. The intro says they are alkaline-loving, but later you say that the soil pH should be between 5.8 and 6.5. A pH of anything less than 7 is considered acidic, not alkaline (basic). Please clarify what the ideal soil pH should be for successfully growing delphiniums. Thank you!
After many years of growing Delphiniums, I
finally figured out how to protect them during our often snowy winters in
New York. And I 'm gardening in very large pots on a terrace.
I don't have to lift them or bring them inside.
I just put sand around (not on) the plants so
that even as the snow melts, even if it's a rainy
winter, they have good drainage.
You can get the sand at most hardware stores.
I now lose very few delphiniums
I currently have 5 that are two years old
and 3 that are 3-years old.
They don't last forever, but if you their roots
have lots of room to grow, they can become very
tall--even over 2 years.
Some are now six feet tall, and even in containers,
they have spread to 2-3 tall delphiniums that bloom
twice each summer.
Thanks for catching that! The information in the intro is correct: Delphiniums prefer alkaline soil, not acidic. Your soil should stay on the lower end of alkaline (between 7 and 9 pH), however.
I live in Minnesota. Last year I planted some potted Emperor Delphiniums (dark deep purple with white bee) And one or two light blues, they grew about 2ft. With at least 2 stalks. After fall was well over and just before winter began I cut all of them back. It鈥檚 finaly spring here no more snow all the snow I think has finaly melted and we have had 4 days of over 58* degrees in a row w/ no weather below 60 in the forecast.. other spring flowers are growing out of ground. Dafadiles etc. when will my DELPHINIUMS start to show some effort of growing my garden is bare.
Bought this plant in full bloom 2 years ago and planted it in a new bed with fresh deep earth and mulch. It has half a day in full sun and half a day in shade. It grows nice strong thick 5 to 7 leafy stalks growing tall to about a yard and a half tall, and puts all its growing to growing green and tall throughout the spring and summer but for the last two years , no flowers at all. How can I get this plant to produce flowers?
I don't know what the dead part looks like. Sometimes I think the white is dead, but other white looks like it's the new blooms starting. What is the green pod? Should I remove it. The only thing I am confident about is when the blue dries out!
Could you post pictures of the parts and what to deadhead?
Sounds like to me, you did not get any pollinators (Bee鈥檚 or butterfly鈥檚) that first year they were planted. Awe that鈥檚 sad. It鈥檚 best to plants several pollinator favorites together at the same time. To guarantee they smell and will come. Marigolds, purple hyssops, Phlox and candy tuff, they like keep in mind flowers are Regional and species by favorite. Meaning each region has specific butterfly鈥檚 and therefore each species has their favorite flowers. Check for the species that favor your region and plant their specific favorite flower .. I don鈥檛 know if it is too late for your flowers to bud.
Hi I bought some beautiful delphinium plants mid July. The nursery had them in the Perennial section. I hooked the informations to each plant but either birds ran off with them or ? Anyway...they all went to seed and I took all the little pods off and emptied the seeds into baggies. Now Im wondering if that was right? Should I go dump the seeds with the plant? Im not a good gardener...Ive been told non jokingly that I should not have a yard! I agree. So what do I do with the seeds? Deb
You could dump the seeds near the plant. Some delphs grow easily from seed, some do not. If you want to grow the seeds (or plants) sucessfully, you should test your soil. Here’s some advice: /news/gardening/gardening-advice/how-take-soil-test
Delphiniums do poorly in acidic or neutral soil. So, if you prefer not to test at this time, broadcast lime, wood ashes, or a mixture of the two over the soil you would use for this alkaline-loving perennial. Learn more about soil amendments.
Overall, re whether the seeds will set, consider contacting the source you bought them from for information. They may be able to tell you what type they are.
I have just purchased 2plants in pots is it ok to plant out now