Dahlia

I told a friend…The Dahlia Dish, March 25, 2024

One of the things that fascinates us about dahlia blooms is that there are so many beautiful varieties that haven’t or never seem to “make it big”. They take their time to catch on. They sit a little longer on the shelves, they wait like wallflowers for an invite to dance, they might be the last players to get picked to play on the team…Why?

Dahlia Bargaly Blush

The visual appeal of a flower might be a combination of preference for just two qualities: colour and form. The functional appeal of a flower is how well it serves the needs of the grower in the garden and the vase: think stem length, bloom time, “floriferosity”, vase life, tubers and also colour and form.

If a bloom meets both visual and functional appeal is it guaranteed to be a winner? Is it going to hit the big times? Is it going to be the next Hollywood star in your bouquets and gardens? Maybe! Much more likely if it gets airtime! And much much more likely if the hype is not an empty promise that eventually sends the bloom down the road of ambiguity.

The volume of street chatter needs to get loud enough for dahlia growers to hear the call of a dahlia name more than once or twice and in a favourable tone. Often this chatter starts from a dahlia society or from a dahlia show where top prizes are coveted. Word of mouth is powerful! Remember that fabulous Faberge Organics Shampoo TV commercial starring actress Heather Locklear? “…I liked it so much I told 2 friends about it, and they told 2 friends, and so on, and so on, and so on”… that very same phenomenon happens with dahlias…

Dahlia Cherish

Dahlias that are on either side of the limelight are excellent choices for the vase and garden because they can usually be found at reasonable and in some cases low prices whereas those unicorns directly under the bright lights of stardom can cost a pretty penny, an arm or leg, maybe even your firstborn! Varieties on the bleeding edge of limelight are usually lesser known or new to the scene, while classic varieties that were once in the limelight have been around for awhile, are well known, readily available and have great qualities. Classics are a fantastic choice for new growers and seasoned growers too if they’ve never graced your garden.

2023-036 Medeek Meadows

A few varieties that we think are on the bleeding edge of limelight because of their visual and functional appeal, relative scarcity or obscurity and incredible qualities include: Bargaly Blush, Island View Moon, Cherish, Clearview Peachy, Aurora’s Kiss, Daddy’s Girl, After Dusk, Jabberbox and Ferncliff Classy.

A few solid classics that we adore and love to grow include: Carl Chilson, Ivanetti, Cornel, Robin Hood, Jowey Paula, Nijinsky, Just Peachy, and Snoho Sonia.

Dahlia Jowey Paula

Remember! The beautiful dahlias on both sides of the limelight are often just as incredible as the current “stars” and “unicorns”! Tell a friend!!!

Grow Beautiful Dahlias!

Enjoy the Dahlia!

Dahlia

What in the influence?!?… The Dahlia Dish March 19th, 2024

Our Boppa grew dahlias in the gardens by the house at the farm on Oldfield road and I wonder if he didn’t grow them would I be growing them today? As a kid, I remember being particularly enamoured with the huge yellow blooms of Kelvin Floodlight. They made a huge impact! So much so that when I bought my first house 30 years later and finally had my own gardens, I planted my first dahlias along with green arrow shelling peas (because they are AMAZING too and great snacks if you like snacking straight off the vine)! There was no internet back in the early 80s so exposure to beautiful dahlias was limited to seeing them in the gardens of friends and family, via a visit to the dahlia display at the Butchart Gardens, via local Dahlia Society events, or the exhibition hall at a fall fair (our closest was the Saanich Fall Fair). Since that first house, my gardens have never been without dahlias! But… unlike my Boppa who seemed to grow the same varieties year after year, I find myself continuously enamoured by new varieties with their fabulous forms and colours.

I did grow Kelvin Floodlight for the sake of sentiment and nostalgia in my early gardens. But new factors influenced my decision to stop growing it. Its a show stopper to be sure due to its magnificent size and bright yellow colour but its too big for the average bouquet and is also a later bloomer so not the best choice for me with the shorter growing season where we live in Terrace in Northwest BC vs the Victoria area on Vancouver Island…. so KF had to go! Tough choices when you have limited space and certain requirements (i.e. must be able to use in a bouquet)!

Availability and access to new varieties ramped up exponentially since the internet became a thing… and then even more so in the last 20 years +or- as smart phones and social media on the internet became things… Thinking back to around the year 2005 I was working for a well-loved airline called Hawkair. I remember Captain Lopes showing us this new “app” called Facebook where you could sign up for an account and connect with friends and family no matter where they were in the world so long as they had accounts too “for free”! Wild! Smartphones with cameras enabled the ability to connect to the internet and share photos of beautiful dahlias in just seconds!!! Internet + Social Media + Smartphones = Dahlia Awareness to the nth degree! You might also call this influence…

Ever wonder how many photos of beautiful dahlias have been shared via social media?! Sooooo many! We can admire seemingly limitless photos of dahlias 24/7/365! Anytime, any day, all year long! We are under the influence!!!

Dahlia Skeena Posh and Chic

Over the years I find that my preferences for colours and forms of dahlia flowers changes… but the 1 thing that stays constant is my appetite for new varieties. The thrill of watching a new variety bloom for the first time! Its so exciting to see it bloom in the garden for the first time! When I see these new blooms, I can’t help but start to compare them to varieties I’ve grown before. Which do I prefer and why? Practicality and the attributes of the variety itself are ultimately what influences me the most when it comes time to decide if I will continue to grow it or not.

What influences your decision to grow a new variety? Is it the colour? Is it the form? Is it the growth habit? Is it because “everybody” wants it? Is it sentimental? Is it the name of the variety? Is it because it blooms earlier? Is it because its a blooming powerhouse? Is it the size of the bloom? Is it the tubers? Is it the stem length? Is it practicality? Is it show worthiness?

Dahlia Bouquet

Whatever the influence!!! Enjoy the Dahlia!!!

Dahlia

The Dahlia Dish … April 8th, 2023

Dahlia Island View Moon

When do you plant your dahlias outside? … or maybe the more common question is – how early can I plant my dahlias?! A good question! The answer(s) depend mostly on where you live and when you expect your last frost. An easy rule of thumb to remember is to plant your dahlia tubers when the lilacs start blooming.

Dahlia NOID Red Velvet

If your tubers are in cold storage, take them out to warm up and eye up just a couple weeks before your frost free date. This is not absolutely necessary, but if you have any “blind tubers” in your bins, then it’ll save you planting any duds.

Dahlia Blue Boy

If you are eager to get your beauties started earlier than your frost free date (perhaps you live in a really cold climate with a short growing season), you’ll need grow lights, grow room with lots of space, and a heated greenhouse would be excellent. If you have all these resources, then you can get started almost anytime. It is a fair bit of work, but its not work if you love it right?!

Dahlia Boom Boom White

What if I plant my dahlia tubers out in the garden before my frost free date? If you’re a risk taker or maybe you like to push the boundaries or maybe there is another reason that you’d want to plant your dahlia tubers outside before your last frost free date (maybe you’ll be away during that peak planting period which is mid-May for us in Terrace). I have planted my dahlia tubers out in the garden in mid-April in Terrace, once because I was going to be away from the end of April until the first week of June – I came home to lovely dahlia plants happily growing. Another time I had all my dahlias started early and they had lovely green shoots with beautiful sets of leaves. I hardened them off outside for a few days and then planted them out – the very next morning we had our last frost of the year and as soon as the frost melted all my beautiful dahlia plants wilted from the nip of frost. Had I covered them with frost cloth, they may have been protected enough and carried on without any damage.

Dahlia Star’s Lady

If you must plant your dahlias outside in the garden before your frost free date, here are a few things to consider.

  • If the frost nips your dahlias new growth, all is not lost. If the tuber is in good shape it will push up new shoots. The frost kill will likely set back your dahlia’s growth by a couple weeks.
  • If you plant dahlia tubers out early, know that they won’t do much growing until it warms up. Its kind of like putting them in cold storage out in the field – but where they are potentially subjected to additional abject conditions like risk of bugs/pests, rainy weather (a lot of rain and poor drainage can lead to rotting of tubers), frosts (kills off new growth and sets back new growth by a few weeks if your tuber doesn’t rot)
Dahlia Just Peachy
Dahlia Just Peachy

So what do we do at Medeek Meadows? We wait for the lilacs to bloom – mostly! We get our dahlias eyed up ahead of time by moving them out of cold storage as much as a month before our frost free date. Some varieties take longer than others to eye up. We check the weather, and look for signs of frost in the forecast – those mornings after a brilliant sunny day with clear skies at night are the ones to watch out for. Most of our dahlias are field grown. On our mission to get earlier blooms, we look for varieties that are earlier bloomers rather than getting them started early. Dahlias typically bloom from late June until frost. At Medeek Meadows Dahlia Farm in Terrace BC, we don’t expect or rely on June blooms. We usually start seeing dahlia blooms in our bouquets by mid-July. This is always weather dependent – and if we get a cool, wet summer our hopes for July blooms diminish… Dahlias are usually “full-on” in August and September. Dahlias like summers to be the same way we do – moderate warm temperatures, not too hot and not too cold with lots of sunshine.

Dahlia

The Dahlia Dish… February 26, 2023

Dahlia 040 NOID Rocco mislabled from
Dahlia 040 NOID

NOID? What the heck is a Dahlia NOID? … In short, a NOID is a Dahlia who is well loved, grown and nurtured from year to year, but whose name has been lost, forgotten or never known. A NOID is never a Dahlia destined for the compost heap – NOID is a term only used for dahlias that we love and keep. NOID is simply a short reference to “NO IDentification”.

We give our NOIDs a number and a short description that helps us remember which bloom we’re working with during different times of the year when there are no blooms to see (like this time of year when we’re checking our tuber inventories in winter storage). The Dahlia pictured above is known to us only as “040 MM NOID Rocco mislabeled from source”. We’ve hung on to her because we love her qualities.

040 MM NOID is a beautiful dahlia that we see a lot of value in keeping. We acquired her by mistake when we ordered a dahlia named “Rocco” from a grower who sent us a tuber that was not actually “Rocco” but something else entirely… a happy accident 🙂 She’s in the category of very dark red, almost black dahlias – a very nice colour that works with blush pink bouquets – the light in the photo above shows the red in her bloom, but in real life, the bloom looks much darker (see photo below). Beautiful dark stems – an excellent cut flower for bouquets. A good bloomer and often an earlier bloomer for us.

Dahlia NOID (not Rocco)

We use these colour cards from the American Dahlia Society to help us narrow down the colour of Dahlia blooms… its super handy and also very interesting to see the blooms next to the cards. Sometimes its hard to get a good match because the colour variations are almost limitless!

“Dahlia 035 MM NOID – Boppa’s Tutie Fruity” is another favourite NOID. Definitely of sentimental value because it’s an oldie from the farm – my Nana and Boppa’s old Dogwood farm on Vancouver Island. But we love it because its got that gorgeous “flare” of yellow and red. Its a stunner in the garden and also is blessed with great stems for bouquets.

Dahlia
Dahlia Fire Magic

“Fire Magic” originally came to us as a gift from my sister Jacklin. But! She was given the name “Coral Nancy” because they didn’t know the real name and so she became known as “Coral” for her bloom’s beautiful coral colouring + “Nancy” for the woman who gave a friend a tuber awhile back… So for a few years we called this one “Dahlia 009 NOID Coral Nancy” until one summer we accidently stumbled across her real name! We ordered a dahlia called “Fire Magic” which turned out to be exactly the same bloom & tuber production as ol’ Coral Nancy… a little confusion in the garden…and then voila! That’s how we solved the mystery of “009 NOID” (an accurate and consistent naming and labelling system helped too!).

We try to solve all the mysteries! But sometimes it takes years. A search on the internet sometimes turns up an exact match but not always. There are thousands and thousands and thousands of dahlias and some are never named (like those for sale in mixed bags of tubers from big box stores and garden nurseries with packaging names like “Ball mix” or “Cactus mix” or “Waterlily mix” or “Decorative mix” or “Dinnerplate mix” or “Cut flower mix” etc. which are usually imported from large growers overseas). In order to make a match, you need to compare the bloom colour, form, and size. You also need to compare the plant’s growth habit and the size, shape, colour and style of tuber production. All these qualities can differ and provide clues to discover the real name of the well loved NOIDs.

More of our beautiful NOIDs!
If you think you know the real name – we’d LOVE to hear from you!

  • Dahlia 016 MM NOID Meg’s fav orange (possibly Glorie Van Noordwijk)
  • Dahlia 021 MM NOID Red Velvet
  • Dahlia 109 MM NOID Red/Yellow Cactus
  • Dahlia 139 MM NOID Dark Maroon Ball
  • Dahlia 142 MM NOID JJ’s fav purple (gorgeous bright pinky magenta bloom on dramatic dark leaved plant) *Update 2024 we discovered the name is Engelhardt’s Matador*
  • Dahlia 012 MM NOID JJ Bright Scarlet Red
  • Dahlia 113 MM NOID White Waterlily