Chrysanthemum Yogin GINGERGarden mum
Family:Asteraceae
属:茼蒿属
common name:Garden mum
introduce:Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial
Family: Asteraceae
Missouri Native: No
Native Range: None
Height: 1.5 to 2 feet
Spread: 1 to 1.5 feet
Bloom Time: September - To frost
Bloom Color: Yellow with bronze-red centers
Sun: Full sun (only)
Water: Medium moisture
Maintenance: Low
General Culture:
Best grown in humusy, fertile, consistently moist, well-drained soils in full sun. Tolerates very light shade, and appreciates some afternoon protection from the hot sun in southern climates. Pinch stems back as needed from late spring to mid summer (e.g., Memorial Day and the 4th of July) to control height and to encourage bushy vegetative growth. For best bloom, feed plants several times during the growing season. Cut plants back to 6?after flowering and mulch (e.g., straw or evergreen boughs) for winter. Divide as needed (usually every 2-3 years) in spring or fall. It should be noted that in cold winter climates such as the St. Louis area, plants given winter protection will usually survive, but not always. Winter hardiness can vary considerably from year to year and from location to location within the same hardiness zone. Notwithstanding the preceding culture recommendations, garden mums are frequently purchased in pots in late summer each year and grown as fall flowering annuals to supplement or replace summer annuals, rather than as permanent additions to the garden.
Noteworthy Characteristics:
GINGER is a clump-forming, fall-blooming garden mum with flat decorative capitulum form (flattened, double flowerheads with short ray florets). GINGER is part of the Prophet Series by Yoder. This is a compact, mounded, well-branched hybrid that typically grows 1.5-2?tall and features two-toned flowers that are yellow on the outside and bronze-red in the center. Profuse bloom covers the plant in fall from September to frost. Thick, aromatic, lobed, dark green leaves (to 3?long). GINGER is one of ten (10) decorative chrysanthemum cultivars that were planted at the Kemper Center抯 Lois Whiteside Franklin Flower Trial Garden in spring 2002 for purposes of evaluating garden mum performance in the St. Louis climate. Synonymous with Dendranthema grandiflora 慪ogin?GINGER and C. x morifolium 慪ogin?GINGER. U. S. Plant Patent #6403 issued November 15, 1988.
Problems:
Aphids, thrips and spider mites may cause significant damage. Potential disease problems include Botrytis, leaf spots, rust, powdery mildew, stem and root rots, verticillium wilt, aster yellows and viruses. GINGER flower colors reportedly fade rapidly.
Uses:
Perennial or annual. Mass, group or edging. Borders. Containers.
