|
Published October 23rd, 2024
|
Digging Deep with Goddess Gardener, Cynthia Brian
|
Mum is the Word! |
By Cynthia Brian |
|
The fear factor is real in this zombie garden. Photos Cynthia Brian |
"I go to visit the chrysanthemums. They are indeed, the most universal, the most diverse of flowers." Comte Maurice Maeterlinck, Nobel Prize-Winning Belgian Author
This Halloween while kids are prowling the neighborhoods as Wolverine, Deadpool, Beetlejuice, Ghostbusters, Disney characters, or Taylor Swift, gardeners will be costuming their landscapes with the indomitable chrysanthemum. One of the most popular flowers in the world, "mums" as they are called, come in a wide variety of colors, shapes, and sizes. Blooming in fall when most of the garden is preparing for a long winter's nap, chrysanthemums are hardy, versatile, and vibrant.
Year after year, the mums in my garden bloom in shades of cream, yellow, purple, burgundy, and pink, attracting a plethora of pollinators. The blooms are long-lasting, and the plants are low maintenance. Cutting mums for floral arrangements and bouquets assures that my house is always filled with spicy scents and sweet style.
Native to Asia, China was the first to cultivate chrysanthemums over 2500 years ago for their medicinal properties, though I'm not sure how they were used as medicine, as the entire plant is considered toxic to people and pets. Although mums have been a mainstay of funeral wreaths in the United States, globally they represent rich symbolism in many other cultures. Today in Asia, mums symbolize longevity, vitality, and immortality. It is thought that this resilient flower with its brilliant colors equates to the everlasting nature of life and honors our ancestors.
In Japan, the chrysanthemum is revered for its blooming beauty representing perfection and rejuvenation. The Kiku Matsuri or Chrysanthemum Festival honors this noble plant with the Imperial family using it as the respectful image of their lineage.
It was in the 17th century that mums were introduced into European culture, where they quickly enamored gardeners as cut flowers. Chrysanthemums became associated with romance, affection, sincerity, and love.
At this time of year, as Halloween approaches, chrysanthemums take on an added role. They bring positive energy and good luck to ward off the demons and negative energy of the ghosts, gremlins, and goblins.
Although the best time to plant mums is possibly spring, I prefer to buy small 4-inch pots of hardy blooming chrysanthemums now so that I can coordinate my garden color scheme with my outdoor décor. Nurseries and garden centers have many types to choose from, so choose the varieties that most interest you. You'll find pompons, anemones, spoons, and even newer series, each with different leaf and flower petals. Plant in a location that receives full sunlight, which is six to eight hours per day. Protect them from windy areas. Mums prefer slightly acidic soil enriched with organic matter that drains well. They don't like to be water-logged, but they don't like being completely dry either. Keep the soil moist. Pinching the tips of young plants helps them grow bushier with increased buds. As our temperatures drop, mulch around the base of the plants to protect the roots. Enjoy the blooms for eight to 12 weeks, sometimes more. When flowers fade as winter arrives, cut back the foliage to the ground. These perennials will resurrect next year, offering you another season of optimism. Their normal life cycle is four to five years, but you can increase your odds of growing eternal hardy mums by dividing the roots every three to four years or cultivating by stem cuttings in the spring. If you love the mums you are growing, doing this will get you identical copies.
Mums look gorgeous in pots placed on the patio or porch. Flowers can be as tiny as a quarter or as large as a plate. They are great in borders and beds and can grow to three feet tall and two feet wide. You might need to stake your plants if they get too big. It is important to note that chrysanthemums that are bought in florist foil will be great for indoors or as a holiday gift, but most likely will not have the toughness to be transplanted in the garden. If you want mums for your landscape, buy them at a nursery.
With minimal care, your mums will thrive and be the stars of your fall garden, alongside the growing gourds, pumpkins, and of course the spooky skeletons, scarecrows, zombies, and Jack-o-Lanterns of a Halloween graveyard.
Visit your chrysanthemums and revel in a safe and scary Halloween! Mum is the word!
Happy Gardening. Happy Growing! Happy Halloween |
|
Pink pompon mums in an arrangement with spoon yellow mums, rosemary, marigolds, and digitalis. Photos Cynthia Brian |
|
A bush of purple mums. Photos Cynthia Brian |
|
A fountain decorated for fall with pumpkins, gourds, and squash. Photos Cynthia Brian |
|
This garden boasts a variety of mums in the bud. Photos Cynthia Brian |
|
A variety of colorful chrysanthemums with greens of mock orange
make a fragrant floral display. |
|
|
Cynthia Brian wishes you a Happy Halloween.
For more gardening advice for all seasons, check out Growing with the Goddess Gardener at
https://www.CynthiaBrian.com/books. Raised in the vineyards of Napa County, Cynthia Brian is a New York Times best-selling author, actor, radio personality, speaker, media and writing coach as well as the Founder and Executive Director of Be the Star You Are!r 501 c3 which was just honored as the 2024 Nonprofit of the Year by the Moraga Chamber of Commerce. Tune into Cynthia's StarStyler Radio Broadcast at
www.StarStyleRadio.com. Her newest children's picture book, Books in the Barnyard: Oh Deer!, from the series, Stella Bella's Barnyard Adventures is available at
https://www.CynthiaBrian.com/online-store. Hire Cynthia for writing projects, garden consults, and inspirational lectures.
Cynthia@GoddessGardener.com
https://www.CynthiaBrian.com |
|
|
|