Dahlia Easy Breezy with long stems
Dahlia

Them Stems…The Dahlia Dish January 7, 2025

I love to listen to blues! I love to listen to music when I’m working and I’m 100% sure I’m in good company in that regard! We’re not talking about Chris Stapleton’s cool bluesy tune Them Stems in this post. This is not that, because this is the Dahlia Dish. We’re sharing our thoughts about flower stems. Them dahlia stems.

Great Dahlia Stems

Great stems can be stiff or wirey, thick or thin, hollow or solid, long or short, shades of green or dark shades of red and purple tones. While there is a lot of variety in dahlia stems qualities, when we say a variety has “great stems for bouquets” it generally means that we like using it in bouquets. Great dahlias for cut flowers have stems that we can use easily in bouquets. Some qualities matter more for bouquets, while some matter more for gardens.

After quite a number of years growing dahlias (since 2006) we have never been more thrilled with the stems of varieties in our current collection including our new Skeena varieties. They are almost all double duty dahlias! Great in the garden and great in the vase.

Dahlia Easy Breezy with long stems

Dahlia Stem Colour

Dark stems! Those reddish purple or purplish red stems! We love them in the garden! While the colour of the stems may tend to get lost in bouquets, out in the garden those dahlias with colourful stems are extra gorgeous. Especially when we get a light coloured bloom that is just set off so beautifully by its contrasting dark stems. Gah! Stem colour doesn’t matter so much for bouquets, but it can add interest in the garden.

Dahlia Stem Strength

Stem Strength is important for both bouquets and gardens. Stems should always be strong enough to hold the bloom up under normal conditions and also capable of withstanding cutting, handling, transporting and arranging. Weak stems and weak flower to stem attachments aren’t useful in bouquets or gardens if stems break or flowers break off easily. For some varieties, late season stems can be thinner and not as strong as they were earlier in the season. In our experience we find this to be true for some especially taller and floriferous varieties. Cutting plants like this on the “deeper” side (one or two nodes below where you’d cut for a decent stems length) during the first flush of blooms early in the season can help to keep these plants at a more manageable height over the season and with stronger stems.

Dahlia 2023-038 stem example

Dahlia 2023-038 This is an example of a stem that we did not disbud. It has grown 2 lateral stems about 8 inches below the central bloom. We normally remove these 2 as small buds prior to the stems developing. Often we’d cut the stem at the point where its held in the photo (just above the 2nd node). But here, we intentionally cut the stem “deeper” to keep the plant shorter and bushier.

Dahlia Stem Length

Stem length is most important for bouquets and less so for the garden. For bouquets our favourite bucket/vase/jar/vessel to use for holding after cutting and for arranging bouquets will dictate how long the stems need to be. The buckets we use for holding after cutting are 10.5″ tall. The vessels we prefer for bouquets are 7″ to 9″ tall jars or vases. When we cut blooms, the flower heads need to be proud of the bucket thus guaranteeing that we’ve cut stems that will be long enough and then some for using in bouquets. The top height of our bouquets is usually around 16″ to 18″. This is a good length for wrapped market style cut flower bundles too. When we think of varieties with great stems we like stems to be a minimum of approximately 12″ to 16″ long from the base of the bloom. Cutting the stem for this length may come before, but is often after the first “node” below the bloom. The first node is where lateral buds start growing. This is where the need for dis-budding comes in.

Bucket of Dahlia Flowers

Dis-budding for Stem Length

Most dahlias benefit from a bit of dis-budding, especially when their destination is the vase. Dahlias will have a central bud and at least 1 or more lateral buds that start growing just below the central bud. Initially they look like a bit of a cluster, but as the buds develop their respective stems lengthen and the lateral stems may grow past the central bloom leaving that bloom somewhat hidden “in the plant” with a very short stem. Removing the first one or pair of lateral buds when they are large enough to handle without breaking off the central bud will help achieve a longer stem for the central bloom. Some varieties need more dis-budding than others to achieve better results. We’ll remove just the first bud or pair of lateral buds on some varieties, while on others we may remove up to 5. You’ll soon get to know which varieties are a little less demanding in this regard.

P.S. don’t let those short stems go to waste. Short stems can still be used in small posy style bouquets , single blooms in bud vases, and we frequently use them along the edge of the jar or vase for larger bouquets.

Dahlia Stem Thickness

Thick stems and stiff stems can be challenging to use in bouquets, but we can use them especially if they have a nice 45 degree “chin up” bloom angle. We just don’t want them all to be super thick or super stiff all the time. They are what they are and demand their space in the vase. They can add great structure, while the thinner, wirey stems are more forgiving and can add some whimsey and be easier to work with in arrangements. Thinner wirey stems can be tucked into the vase here and there with ease, whereas chunky stiff stems are better placed in the vase first where they can be happily in place and “worked around”.

The bloom angle and attachment to the stem contributes to the utility of the stems in bouquets. Clock faced blooms (they look straight ahead like a clock on the wall) and navel gazers (blooms that face downward) are harder to use in bouquets, less appealing in the garden, and unlikely to be winners on the show table.

The beautiful blooms of chunky, stiff, short stemmed dahlias are best left in the garden to be enjoyed in our humble opinion! Our favourite dahlias for bouquets always tend to be those that give us great stems for the least amount of work. Not too much dis-budding for good stem length, not too stiff, not too chunky, and always strong enough to hold those beautiful blooms up and also stand up to all the handling between field and final destination.

Dahlia bouquets

Enjoy the Dahlia!

Dahlia Hamari Rose
Dahlia

Best Dahlias for Cut Flowers… The Dahlias Dish Dec. 17, 2024

How can one narrow down the best dahlias for cut flowers to a list of 10 or 20 or 30 or more when there are thousands of varieties to choose from? When you’re growing dahlias for cut flowers, you need to grow quite a few varieties to ensure your bouquets are always beautiful and that they differ from week to week. Having multiple varieties in each colour group or colour palette is important. Having multiple varieties to choose from is important. Having different styles of blooms is important. Having blooms all season is important.

Warning! This is a highly subjective topic, but we hope to give you some ideas that will help you choose the best dahlias to grow for cut flowers.

Our list of favourite dahlias for building bouquets may change over time as we develop and or grow new varieties. And it may also change due to our personal tastes and styles changes. One year we were all about the waterlily blooms, then it was the cactus dahlias that struck our fancy, now its the balls and decorative styles.

We specifically source, select for and grow dahlias that are best for cut flowers. If we can’t use it often in a bouquet, then we’re not likely to grow very many of them and we’re not likely to grow them year after year. The best dahlias for cut flowers must have great stems that are easily used for bouquets and flower arrangements. And they must be floriferous, producing a good amount of blooms over the season.

The vast majority of the dahlias we favour for cut flowers are in the 3-6″ bloom size range and we like a few in the 2″ size range for bouquet accents. We have developed a large collection of varieties that are excellent for cutting, so for the most part we’ll break down our favourites for cut flowers by colour group.

Favourite Accent Dahlias ~2″

Small World (white), Skeena Posh (blush pinky lavender), Skeena Daybreak (yellow), and Skeena Kiss Kiss (red) are favourites.

We like to grow a number of “accent blooms” for bouquets because they add a great deal of interest and texture to arrangements. Typically pompons, miniature ball & decorative style blooms that are approximately 2″ in size work beautifully as accent flowers.

Small World

Favourite White Dahlias ~3-6″

Carl Chilson, Skelmersdale Jayne, Irish Ruffles, Skeena Crystal

White blooms are an excellent staple to have growing because they can be used in so many styles of bouquets all season long.

Dahlia Carl Chilson
Dahlia Carl Chilson

Favourite Blush Dahlias ~3-6″

Skeena Yve, Skeena Posh, CB Snowshadow, Skeena Nana

These are favourites blooms for bouquets that tend to have a white base and blush soft pink or pinky lavender. Odyssey, Tahoma Odyssey, and Daddy’s Girl are excellent too!

CB Snowshadow

Favourite Light or Dark Blend Dahlias ~3-6″

Skeena Easy Breezy, Skeena Harmonies, Skeena Sugar Pie, Blyton Softer Gleam

Blooms with blends of multiple colours are fabulous for tying in solid colour flowers of the same colour palette in bouquets. Some blooms like Skeena Harmonies have an outline of a complementary colour along the petal edges called picotee! Its super pretty.

Blyton Softer Gleam

Favourite Yellow Dahlias ~3-6″

Canoz Jaguar (buttery yellow) , Skeena Hope (soft muted buttery yellow), Skeena Fairy Lights (light and lemony)

Always bright! Always a delight! There are many hues and tones of yellow. The buttery and the lemony tones are on trend for us. The buttery tones pair well with pinks, whites and burgundies. The lemony tones are fun to pair with whites, oranges and lavenders.

Skeena Hope

Favourite Orange Dahlias ~3-6″

Ryecroft Jill, Brown Sugar, Seabeck’s Shirley

The colour of Joy! We. Love. Orange. The thing about orange dahlias is that its such a versatile colour for use in bouquets. Early summer thru to the fall, customers love orange in bouquets all season. When we roll into September, the leaves on the trees start to turn colour and the cooler nights whisper of fall, orange is still a star.

Brown Sugar

Favourite Pink Dahlias ~3-6″

Miss Sarah, Clearview Peachy, Bargaly Blush, Hamari Rose

Pink is forever! Give us all the pink all the time! Again, as with other colour groups there are so many tones and hues of pink. Pastel, barbie, bubblegum, peachy. The list is infinite. Picking a colour palette may help you settle on the varieties that work best for your own preferences.

Bargaly Blush

Favourite Lavender Dahlias ~3-6″

Bloomquist Compare, Skeena Glitter, Snoho Sonia, Robann Regal

We love the soft pastel lavenders. Gorgeous in bouquets with whites and soft yellows.

Some lavenders have a pink tone, and some pinks have a lavender tone. Those subtleties can make a big difference when choosing the best blooms for your bouquets. Sometimes you just won’t know if a dahlia will go well with others until you grow it and use it in bouquets. We take photos of our blooms alongside colour cards to give a sense of the tone and size of dahlias. The colour cards are available for purchase from the American Dahlia Society.

Favourite Coral Dahlias ~3-6″

Askwith Minnie, Flip Flop, Jomanda, Skeena Sockeye

The shades of corals can be softer or darker and depending on the variety lean more into pink, red, or orange tones. We love corals blended in bouquets with whites and yellows. They are also striking when arranged with mauves and lavenders.

Askwith Minnie

Favourite Red Dahlias ~3-6″

Aurora’s Kiss (very dark), Bloomquist Crave (medium dark), Cornel (medium red), Skeena Katie (medium red)

Those dramatic, not quite black, red dahlias are drop dead gorgeous! They go so well with pinks and other tones of red. We love to grow a number of brighter red dahlias to use in our rainbow bouquets.

Aurora’s Kiss

Favourite Purple Dahlias ~3-6″

Twilight Boy (wow colour), Skeena Gem (floriferous), Bloomquist Mojo (vigorous)

Productive purple people pleasers – these favourites are all of that! From incredible colour (Twilight Boy) to exquisite gold tips (Mojo), these dahlias are great choices for cut flowers

Favourite Bronze Dahlias ~3-6″

Hy Patti, Skeena Humpy, Cornel Bronze

Subtle undertones of pink and orange. The bronze colour palette is warm and well suited for exceptional fall themed bouquets.

Cornel Bronze

That’s already quite a few dahlias that make excellent cut flowers. There are so many to enjoy. Discovering which dahlias you find best for cut flowers while building your own stunning collection will keep you, your friends and family in beautiful bouquets for years to come.

Enjoy the Dahlia!

Dahlia

Dahlia Blooms Vase Life…The Dahlia Dish Dec. 13, 2024

Vase life of dahlia blooms varies and is influenced by a number of factors:

1. Number of stems in a vase – A bouquet of 5 dahlia stems can outlast a bouquet with 25 dahlia stems.

2. Maturity of blooms at harvest – Blooms cut when they are approx 1/2 to 3/4 open will last longer in a vase than a bloom cut when fully mature.

Dahlia Bouquet
Fresh Bouquet featuring dahlias: WD Jady, Cornel, Carl Chilson, Skeena 23-074, Skeena 23-047, Dana Iris, & Skeena Rosie.

3. Hydration level of blooms at harvest – Hydration levels of plants are highest in the cool mornings and cloudy cool days. Avoid cutting blooms in the heat of the day. Very hot weather combined with inadequate watering will reduce hydration levels. Strip foliage from stems to ensure it doesn’t rob the blooms of precious hydration.

4. Weather – Bloom quality can deteriorate in cool wet weather – you may notice browning on the tips of petals after a couple days in the vase. Most noticeable on white blooms.

5. Room temperature – Bouquets displayed in cool rooms out of direct sunlight will last longer.

Dahlia Bouquet
Dahlia Bouquet featuring: Megan Dean, Lyn’s Louise, Cream Diane, Skeena Chic, Skeena Pluto, Robann Regal, Barbarry Forum, and Carl Chilson.

6. Water in the vase – make sure to give your dahlia bouquet fresh water especially for the first 3 days when the water uptake is greatest. Fresh water also looks a lot nicer in a glass vase!

7. Style of bloom – Pompon and Ball style blooms last well, especially if they have very firm textured petals like Cornel Bronze. Varieties with softer textured petals tend to have a bit shorter vase life.

8. Size of bloom – Smaller blooms tend to last longer than large blooms.

We use many dahlia bloom styles to create stunning bouquets. We don’t limit it to the Pompon and Ball style blooms just because they can last a little bit longer. They are very round and formal to the eye. Variation in petal and bloom shapes adds much beauty, whimsy and interest to bouquets.

Average vase life for dahlias is 4-5 days + or – by simply ensuring they have their feet in fresh water. You can fuss over them, sear stems, trim stems, add flower food, sing to them, dance for them and you may just squeeze more time.

Dahlia Bouquet
Dahlia bouquet: BQ Compare & Carl Chilson with Skeena Yve, Skeena Jimi, & Skeena Nana. Cosmo and Dusty Miller greens along for the ride.

Enjoy the Dahlia!

#enjoythedahlia #skeenadahlias #terracebc #dahliafarm #dahlias #growbeautifuldahlias #dahliabouquets #freshflowers #flowerfarm #bouquets

Dahlia Bouquet
Dahlia

Dahlia Blooms for Bouquets…The Dahlia Dish Dec. 11, 2024

The bouquet pictured here is created in our classic style! The blooms in this one are from dahlias Cream Diane, Skeena Posh, Hamari Rose, Skeena Hope, Small World, Carl Chilson, Silver Years and Skeena Harmonies.

With so many choices, which varieties and styles should you grow? What qualities should you consider?

Our five main considerations for choosing a dahlia variety suitable for bouquets are Stem Length, Style of Bloom, Colour of Bloom, Size of Bloom, and Floriferosity.

1. Stem Length – nice long stems are preferred – it can mean less time spent disbudding.

The variety pictured here is Skeena Easy Breezy with her very long stems!

Dahlia Skeena Easy Breezy

2. Style of bloom – we prefer a blend of styles. Balls, poms, decorative, waterlily, cactus… Using a blend of bloom styles can add lovely variety and texture to bouquets.

Dahlia Bouquet

An example of a bouquet including Pompon accent blooms (Small World), Formal Decorative Blooms (Lupin Chris and Jowey Veronique), Stellar style blooms (purple Skeena seedling 23-037 and Sandy Couzens an imperfect stellar form with lovely purple picotee edging on its white petals).

3. Colour of bloom – blending colours in bouquets is a bit of an art. One of the reasons we grow so many varieties is that it affords us an extensive array of colours to choose from for building our dahlia bouquets. If you’re limited on space, or just getting started growing dahlias for bouquets, give some thought to the colour palettes that you and your customers are looking for.

A fall colour toned bouquet with gorgeous warm and golden yellow, orange and burgundy tones. Dahlias in this bouquet include Day Dreamer (waterlily style), WD Aunty Dor (Stellar style), Skeena Shan (Formal Decorative style), Skeena Sugar Pie (Formal Decorative), Skeena Gem (Formal Decorative), and Hy Suntan (Ball).

Dahlia Bouquet

4. Size of bloom – we like a range of blooms sizes. From the pompons under 2 inches in size up to about 5 or 6 inches max. Using a mix of bloom sizes in bouquets adds interest, variation and visual appeal.

Dahlia Bouquet

This bouquet shows a range of bloom sizes from about 2″ up to about 5″. We’ve also included some dahlia bud stems that haven’t quite opened yet (a great way to use stems in the fall that won’t have enough time to fully bloom before frost).

5. Floriferosity – growing varieties that have lots of blooms over the season are favoured. Remember to pinch plants to encourage lateral branching and more stems. And remember to disbud to get more usable stems per plant.

6. Space – if you’re limited in growing space, you may just want to pay a bit more attention to size of bloom and floriferostiy. It takes more small blooms to fill out a bouquet than larger blooms. A garden of pompons would be delightful, but also much harder to fill out a bouquet with such tiny blooms.

Enjoy the Dahlia!

#enjoythedahlia #skeenadahlias #terracebc #dahliafarm #dahlias #growbeautifuldahlias #dahliabouquets #freshflowers #bouquets

Dahlia Bouquet
Dahlia

Dahlia Bouquets… The Dahlia Dish March 13, 2024

When there are so many beautiful flowers in the world , you might wonder why choose the dahlia? Why is the dahlia so wonderful for bouquets? We think we know the answers! There are A LOT of reasons!!!

Firstly, dahlias are available in almost every shade and every hue of every colour unlike many flowers that are available in just a handful of standard colours. There are sooooo many colours! So many! You’ll find dahlias in the colour groups of White, Yellow, Pink, Orange, Red, Purple, and Bronze. No Blue… and I don’t think we’ve ever seen a Green or a Brown dahlia bloom, but genetically these may be possibly whereas Blue is not.

Additionally, unlike most other flowers, dahlias are available in multiple magical forms and styles! Forms are defined by the general shape of the bloom, the shape of its petals, the number of rows of petals, the arrangement of the petals, open centred (like a sunflower showing off its central disc), or closed centre (the central disc is not visible until the flower is fully matured and spent). Its true that some dahlias can look quite a bit like other flowers such as Asters, Peonies, Daisies or Waterlilies!

Dahlia Lavender Lovers Bouquet

The shapes! The general shape of the flower can be round like a ball (Ball and Pompon), flatter like a plate (Decorative), cupped like a saucer (Waterlily). The shape of the petals in each bloom are another source of incredible variation in form! Petals can be pointy, rounded, incurved, recurved, reflexed, wavy, curly, flat, elongated, tubular… The shape of a dahlia bloom’s petals further define forms of Cactus, Semi-Cactus, Informal Decorative, Formal Decorative, Novelty, Anenome, Peony…

The petals! The number of petals in a bloom further contribute to the appeal of dahlias. Some are Singles… open centred having a single row of petals around a central disc. Others are Doubles… multiple rows of petals around the central disc, some with a closed centre, some with an open centre.

Dahlia Bouquet

The size of the blooms! As tiny as 1″ across (Pompons) these are perfect for bouquet accents… to larger than 10″ across (multiple forms such as Decorative and Semi-Cactus often referred to as Dinner Plate sizes) that are spectacular to use for focal flowers in event or bridal bouquets. There is a dahlia bloom available in every single size you desire for a bouquet! We favour those that are up to 6″ in size for daily bouquets.

The stems! Dahlia stems can differ by variety too! Some are super stiff and straight up, while others are more wiry or bendy and perfect for whimsy. We like the full range of stems for use in bouquets so long as they are long enough to use!

Dahlia Bouquet

The bloom window! Dahlias offer blooms for a long period during the summer! Bloom time varies by variety. Some will bloom earlier in the season and some will bloom later. We favour the earlier to mid season blooming varieties because we want them for bouquets as early as possible in the season. We do love to have a few later blooming dahlias in the queue to contribute to the ever changing variation that adds interest to our bouquets all season long. And remember! Dahlias are known to be cut and come again flowers! The more blooms you cut for bouquets, the more blooms you’ll get!

The possibilities of creating beautiful bouquets using dahlia blooms are endless! The colours, the forms and styles, the sizes, the stems, the bloom window! Dahlias make it fun and easy to create beautiful bouquets enabling the spread joy and happiness!

dahlia tubers canada

Tips for beautiful bouquets:

  • Choose colours that work well together! If the tone or shade of a particular variety isn’t quite right, save it for another bouquet. Sometimes when we grow a new variety, we find that the colour might be gorgeous but also awkward because we don’t have any other dahlia blooms that go well with it. If we really love the colour, we’ll use these as focal flowers in bouquets using other flower types and greens as filler. And if we really really love the colour, we’ll start trying to source more dahlia varieties to complement it and we will often grow more of that variety.
  • Threes work well! 3 varieties with colours that complement, 3 stems of each bloom… or multiples thereof.
  • Bridges and blenders! Many dahlias are bicolour or have a blush or a kiss of a secondary colour. These are perfect for tying in colours in a bouquet! Cherish is a pale yellow with a pinky purple burgundy kiss that is incredible for using in bouquets to tie in with other blooms of pink, purple, or burgundy. Bowser Denyse is a beautiful pink bloom with white petal tips that help to tie in white blooms or other pink blooms….
  • Fillers! While we are quite partial to a vase full of just dahlias, filler flowers and greens are always handy and afford variety, texture and interest to bouquets. Some of our favourites are zinnias, cosmos, honeywort, bouquet dill, peony foliage, marigold gem, feverfew, borage, statice, asters, strawflowers, phlox, euphorbia, eucalyptus and in mid-late September we love to use dahlia foliage for greens in bouquets!
  • Freshness! Fresh flower bouquets are not meant to last forever. Dahlias typically last about 5 good days in a vase. Cut blooms before they are fully mature ~1/2 to 3/4 open. They may open up a wee bit after blooming but generally not much and hardly at all if cut at the 1/2 to 3/4 open stage. Cut blooms in the cool of the morning and place directly into cool clean water. Keep the water in the vase fresh – change it daily if possibly (most importantly in the first few days while the stems are still taking up water). Bouquets displayed in a cool area will last longer than bouquets displayed in a warm area.
dahlias Canada

Grow Beautiful Dahlias!
Make Beautiful Bouquets!
Enjoy the Dahlia!!!

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