The Splendid Fuchsias: Where To Place Fuchsia Plants And How To Care for The Fuchsia Flower
If you want enchanting flowering gardens for shade, rely on the
fuchsia plant. Whether you plant fuchsia flowers in individual pots,
window boxes, or hanging baskets, fuchsia plants are a gorgeous
flowering species noted for their grace and splendor. There are
hundreds of varieties of fuchsia flowers, single and double, in rose,
purple, and white shades, and in both upright and hanging plants.
Fuchsia plants are particularly popular in California, where the
summers are cool and the winters sufficiently moderate; but fuchsias
make handsome container gardens in other climates too.
Except for the hanging types, the fuchsia flower is by nature an
upright shrubby grower, fine as specimen plants for container gardens.
Under proper conditions, some attain considerable size. The dark
purple-and-red Reiter's Giant grows to five feet or more, and the
single red Mephisto is even taller. Alice Hoffman, a semi-double white
and pink, is a dwarf, to two feet, as is the three-foot Camellia, a
double white and red.
Tree, or standard, fuchsias are always very popular. These are
simply the usual fuchsias trained to tree form. With patience, you can
develop your own, starting with a four- to five-inch cutting kept tied
to a strong four- to five-foot stake. At the desired height of two,
three, or four feet, the single stalk can be pinched back and allowed
to branch. In the meantime, do not remove all leaves from the stem,
because they are needed to manufacture food for your fuchsia plant.
Good varieties to train to tree form include the purple-and-red
Muriel, the red-and-white Storm King, the double lavender-and-red Gypsy
Queen, and the all-white Flying Cloud.
Many gardeners
believe that the best way to appreciate the fuchsias flower is to plant
fuchsias in hanging baskets, because their exquisite blooms are seen at
or above eye level. They are most decorative for patios,
entrances, and on walls and tree trunks. They can also be suspended in
redwood slat boxes and in glazed or plastic containers. In moss-lined
wire baskets, fuchsia flowers require more water because the roots dry
out more quickly.
For basket planting, you will like the double magenta-and-carmine
Anna, the single red-and-white Claret Cup, and also the semi-double
purple-and-red Muriel, mentioned for tree-training. Among the most
brilliant varieties of fuchsia flowers are the double, bright red
Marinka; the nearly orange Aurora Superba; the carmine-rose and
orange-red San Francisco; and the rose-purple-and-pink Amapola. It is
much more aesthetically pleasing to plant just one variety of fuchsia
flowers per container.
In planters or raised beds
of container gardens, fuchsia plants can be trained into interesting
espalier forms against a wall or fence where the space may be too
narrow for other plants. Though not difficult, the espalier plant
requires time and patience. First make a trellis of wood or wire. Five
to seven tiers are customary. Then train your plant as it grows,
pinching growth frequently to induce branching and to avoid bare stems.
Varieties to espalier include the red-and-scarlet Falling Stars, the
blue-and-rose Coquette, and the red-and-white Dr. John Gallwey.
Fuchsia plants can also be trained into pyramids in the manner of
formal English ivy plants. Since the young fuchsia shoots tend to break
easily, it takes patience and a steady hand to tie them properly to the
form.
These tender woody plants do best under cool, humid conditions. They
are especially successful in coastal areas, where fog and humidity
prevail, though some fuchsia varieties, as the single all-red Mephisto
and the red-and-white Mme. Cornelissen, will thrive in hot, dry inland
regions. Fuchsia flowers are great favorites because they bloom in
shade, not the heavy shade of low-branching trees, but high, open shade
and that found on the north side of a building. In dense shade, fuchsia
plants get leggy and flower sparingly. In hot, direct sunshine,
however, they dry out and the leaves burn. Windy locations should be
avoided because of the delicate fuchsia flowers and brittle branches.
Moisture is essential but good drainage is important also. Fuchsias
announce dryness by wilting. In container gardens, they usually need
water every day and sometimes more often. In the bottom of the
container provide sufficient rough material—broken flower pots,
pebbles, or cinders—to insure free passage of water. Do not allow pots
to stand in water and in hot weather sprinkle the foliage to remove
dust and increase humidity.
Fuchsia plants require an acid soil, a mixture rich in organic
matter. A good combination consists of one part good garden loam, one
part leaf mold or peat moss, and either one part old manure or a small
amount in dehydrated form if you want to mix it yourself.
Containers should be large enough to allow for full development of
plants during the summer growing season. A small fuchsia plant needs a
six-inch pot; if two or three are grown together, use a ten- or
twelve-inch pot. Starting with young plants is preferable, although
large specimens are satisfactory if they are healthy and vigorous. When
fuchsias are wintered in containers and are not treated as annuals, you
can enrich the growing medium the first year by scooping a few inches
of soil from the top and replacing it with a fresh mixture. The next
year, take the fuchsia plants out of containers in early spring, cut
back the tops and some of the roots and repot in fresh soil in the same
container. Drastically cutting back branches in the spring, before
growth starts, will make fuchsia plants branch more abundantly.
When you want to increase your collection of fuchsia plants, take
three-inch cuttings from the tender spring growth, dip the ends in a
hormone powder and insert the lower inch of each stem in a mixture of
half leaf mold and half sand. Protect the cuttings from sun and either
spray them lightly from time to time or cover with polyethylene plastic
to prevent their drying out.
When roots have formed, transfer the fuchsia plants to small pots in
a mixture of light loam and leaf mold. Cuttings can also be taken in
late summer or early fall for small plants that are easier to winter.
Voracious in their needs, fuchsia plants require regular feeding through the growing season. Give liquid fertilizer
once a month, following directions on the package. Fish emulsion,
applied monthly, will give especially good results. Fish emulsion can
be purchased as a “deodorized” product which is highly recommended.
During the winter, store your fuchsia plants at 45 to 50 degrees to
keep them dormant. Water sparingly, just enough to prevent wood from
shriveling. Outdoors, hardy fuchsias will survive to 25 degrees, but
where hardiness is questionable; it is safer to winter plants in a
greenhouse, cool room, shed, or in a cold frame. During this period, cover the roots with a layer of peat moss.
Now that you know how to plant and care for fuchsias, plant a
hanging basket or a container garden and delight in the beauty of
fuchsia plants either in your home or yard.
Happy Gardening!
Copyright © 2006 Mary Hanna All Rights Reserved.
This article may be distributed freely on your website and in your ezines, as long as this entire article, copyright notice
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Mary Hanna is an aspiring herbalist who lives in Central Florida. This
allows her to grow gardens inside and outside year round. She has
published other articles on Cruising, Gardening and Cooking. Visit her
websites at http://www.GardeningHerb.com
http://www.CruiseTravelDirectory.com
and http://www.ContainerGardeningSecrets.com