Monday, April 14, 2025
Dahlias
Yesterday was my appointed day for the dahlias' annual spring reveal. I hauled them all out of the shed where they'd spent the winter, dry in their pots. There are eight of them altogether, and my plan was to repot them so they'd all have fresh soil for this year's growing season.
Unfortunately, I didn't have enough compost to repot them all completely. So I repotted five of them, and the other three I simply took away the top couple of inches of soil and gave them a fresh layer, figuring at least some of the nutrients from the new compost would filter down into the older soil below. It will be interesting to see if it makes a difference as they grow and bloom.
I once again realized that I have too darn many dahlias. Five of them I grew from seed -- I planted a bunch of seeds and that's how many sprouted, so I didn't have much choice in the matter. Another one grew of its own accord in another plant's pot, presumably a seed that somehow got away. The other two I bought as mature plants.
By the way, when you dig up a dormant dahlia, this is what they look like -- a thick knot of tubers. If I did this the way the experts recommend, I'd wash all the soil off that ball, neatly trim away anything shriveled or dead and repot the tubers in entirely fresh dirt. But I'm going the easy route, so I just brushed them off. If I lost a few dahlias it wouldn't kill me.
Here are some things that are blooming at the moment: Our aquilegia (above)...
...a fancy variegated deadnettle...
...and the candytuft, which persists every year despite the fact that Olga wipes her face on it every evening after she eats. (This is a tough plant -- it's one of the few smaller plants in the garden that's been here longer than we have.)
We've had a few failures, though. I already mentioned our struggling tree fern -- the jury's still out on that one. The foam flower (Tiarella), which looked so healthy in its pot last summer, and which I was so proud of having saved from its crowded, overshadowed location in the flowerbed, failed to come up this spring and when I examined the pot it was completely empty. Not sure what happened there.
Dave got launched successfully yesterday morning and he sent me a text last night that he'd landed safely in Michigan -- in Romulus, the township that includes the Detroit airport. Earlier he'd texted me "Jolan tru," which I did not understand at all -- I replied "Covfefe," thinking he'd simply done some sloppy typing. It turns out that he was about to take off on his connecting flight from Minneapolis, and "Jolan tru" is Romulan (as in "Star Trek") for "goodbye." Dave is officially nerdier than I am when it comes to "Star Trek."
I spent yesterday evening watching "All the President's Men," a movie I have seen a hundred times and could watch a hundred more. It makes me nostalgic for journalism, conversations with demanding editors and smart newsroom repartee. My grandfather and my uncle, both staunch Republicans who lived in Washington, hated The Washington Post for its relentless reporting on Nixon and Watergate -- I'm pretty sure my grandfather called it the Pinko Post, or something like that. I wonder what they'd make of Trump if they were alive. Trump's dogged insistence on loyalty isn't so different from Nixon's "enemies list," and his insecurity and paranoia are very Nixonian as well.
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Do you never divide the tubers and repot them to have more plants? That top one doesn't look like aquilegia to me.
ReplyDeleteI've never divided them because I don't want more dahlias!
DeleteThe aquilegia is Aquilegia vulgaris, or common columbine, according to my plant ID app. (And it was certainly sold to us as aquilegia.)
I googled images of aquilegia vulgaris and it seems you have a "double" with the extra petals.
DeleteI have never grown dahlias. It always seemed to much faff for me. I tend to just chuck things in a pot and see if it grows.
ReplyDeleteYour garden does look like a lush oasis in the big city.
((too much)) ...sloppy typing
DeleteOnce they get going, they just need water and good soil. Oh, and slugs like them, which is why I keep mine in pots. But overwintering them is a faff, yeah.
DeleteI agree with River, doesn't look like an aquilegia to me either! I potted up my few dahlia corms about 2 weeks ago, but the tops still look dead! It is the first time I have tried to over winter them wrapped in newspaper.
ReplyDeleteIt is indeed aquilegia (see my response to River). My dahlias aren't showing any growth yet either. Maybe a tiny nub on a few of the tubers. I overwintered my dahlias in paper one year and they did fine.
DeleteI kind of knew about dahlias and their bulbs, but reading your method of dealing with them is interesting.
ReplyDeleteYour grandfather and uncle both sound scary and would be now be supporters of #47. They didn't think Nixon was a corrupt crook, with overwhelming evidence?
I'm not sure how they felt about Nixon, to be honest, but they HATED the "liberal media." I'm not sure my grandfather would be a huge fan of Trump, because he was a scientist, but he probably would have voted for him.
DeleteIt sounds like a day filled with gardening experiments, Star Trek references, and nostalgic reflections—all woven together with humor and a touch of floral resilience.
ReplyDeleteThat pretty much describes it. I'm glad the humor was evident. :)
DeleteI, too, wonder what my Republican late-family would think of Trump. I like to believe they wouldn’t have tolerated him. I know my father already thought he was an idiot in the 1980s. I love your covfefe response! I would have been at a loss, but wouldn’t have responded with anything so clever. Jolan tru? Seriously? I hope all goes smoothly with Dave’s trip.That’s a lot of traveling lately. Live long and prosper.
ReplyDeleteThe fact that my grandfather supported Nixon -- at least enough to be opposed to the Post -- suggests that he might have supported Trump too. But who knows.
DeleteI haven't seen dahlias in the gardens here in a while, I wonder why. Lately I've been growing mainly succulents, the easiest and safest.
ReplyDeleteIsrael seems like it might be awfully dry and sunny for dahlias. I don't think they do well with a lot of heat, at least not dry heat. They like to stay moist.
Delete"The Washington Post" did a fantastic job in doggedly pursuing Nixon's crimes on behalf of the American people. It is such a shame that the paper is now owned by Jeff Bezos and has suffered from his interference. He should remember that "Democracy Dies In Darkness".
ReplyDeleteIt was an era of journalistic greatness that I'm not sure we will ever see again, given the splintering of big-budget newspapers and the superficiality of television and YouTube.
DeleteIt is a pretty double petalled aquilegia. Aquilegia are very promiscuous, you should introduce some more different types into your garden and see what they produce!
ReplyDeleteWe have another one that's not yet blooming, and we used to have a third, but I haven't seen it yet this year.
DeleteI usually repot in spring by mixing old and new potting soils together. A lot of flowers do well in this semi rich mix, I notice. I had a single dahlia long ago, which I never dug up, and it didn't mind. Came up year after year, still going when we left the house. In spite of the careless gardener.
ReplyDeleteWas this in New Jersey? How did it survive the winters? I left a pot out here in London -- which is much milder than New Jersey -- one winter as an experiment at that dahlia died.
DeleteYes, NJ. It was in a sheltered spot near the brick house wall, no wind, so that might have been it.
DeleteI've got a bag of Dahlia bulbs which I bought about 6 weeks ago. I've been waiting to plant them. Maybe I should start!
ReplyDeleteMid-April is my usual time for putting out dahias, but I see it's going to be 39º F in a couple of nights so it is still a bit chilly for them! You could wait another week or two without harm.
DeleteThe Felon will go down so hard in history that Nixon won't look so bad in comparison.
ReplyDeleteDave speaks Romulan; he is quite nerdy. But I love that you texted back 'covfefe.'
Nixon really was an earlier era's Trump. I have no doubt Trump has engineered (or participated in) "dirty tricks" every bit as devious, but they're probably harder to detect in today's digital world.
DeleteYou've got a good collection of Dahlias. The size of the large cluster of tubers shows you know how to make them thrive. Flowering Dahlias in a mass are spectacular. They will make a lovely focal point in the garden.
ReplyDeleteThe flowers always please me and the bees and hoverflies love them!
DeleteI don't think dahlias do so well in Florida. I planted some one year and they came up and bloomed but that was that. I probably had no idea I was supposed to put them up for winter.
ReplyDeleteHow long ago Nixon seems. Things don't change much, do they? Well, except to get worse.
Unless it freezes they should be fine in the ground, and even then it would have to be a cold freeze. I wonder if Florida is actually too warm for them? I don't remember ever seeing dahlias there but maybe I just didn't know what I was looking at back then.
DeleteAlthough to my knowledge, I've never had any staunch republicans in my family, I would pay quite a bit of money for some of my more political oriented ancestors to come back to this world and see the way politics are playing out just to see their reactions.
ReplyDeleteBut as a student of history, I'm sure if we went back to some of the past politics in our histories, we would be surprised at how bitter and venomous they were too. I don't think that has changed, only the manner of which we receive it.
I think you're right that earlier eras were fraught with conflict too. The '50s had McCarthyism, the '60s had pretty much everything, the '70s had Nixon, the '80s had Reagan and Iran-Contra and Oliver North. There's always something. But right now there's a LOT of something.
DeleteCould be the foam flower needed to be in the ground to survive the winter and froze in the pot. Dahlias are too finicky for me even if they did do down here which I don't think they do, like tulips. Tulips are an annual here, have to be planted new every year.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure my dad voted republican since he was none to pleased that I supported a democrat the first time I could vote. Have no idea how my mother voted though I know she did.
Yeah, I wondered that about the foam flower. I never knew how my parents voted back then either. No one talked about it!
DeleteI love your flower photos and also that lovely blue sky in the Olga photo. I'm useless as a gardener but I have my daffodils blooming like crazy so I am happy.
ReplyDeleteIf they're blooming, you're doing something right, even if you're just leaving them alone. (Which is pretty much what daffodils want.)
DeleteSometimes plants just do what they want.
ReplyDeleteThat's for sure!
DeleteWe just watched "All the President's Men" last month. I love that film too. Last night we were watching "Wolf Hall" and commenting on how much Henry VIII reminded us of Trump and the whole political machinations are the same then as they are now. Sad, isn't it? You'd think we'd learn through time. I love the dahlias and hope they all do well. I'm trying to decide if my totally disappeared hostas are the results of deer, a plant thief (unlikely) or they just haven't emerged and there is no dead leaf cover on the ground. We shall see.
ReplyDeleteOur hostas are only just emerging now, so I wouldn't be surprised if yours are still dormant.
DeleteYo Brother Man , So Dig That Sleepy Girl Face In The Garden
ReplyDeleteExcellent Capture ,
Cheers
She loves the sun!
DeleteYour aquilegias are in advance of ours. We didn't dig up our dahlias - they didn't survive, of course. There must be something special in Olga's face/nose/mouth that the candytuft likes and thrives on.
ReplyDeleteHa! I'm not sure the flower enjoys the dog as much as the dog enjoys the flower.
DeleteI love that Dave speaks Romulan!! Nerdy is good. I had to google your response to know what it meant. I like to think most staunch Republicans from the past would be horrified about Trump and the current party.
ReplyDeleteI think a lot of Republican moderates are horrified but they've gone along with him to keep Republicans in power. Maybe that will change in the next election cycle.
DeleteI love dahlias but have never grown them. I'm not someone who digs up my bulbs--much too lazy! Dave speaks Romulan--yay!
ReplyDeleteI'm generally too lazy for that kind of thing, too. I think the dahlias and the avocado tree are the only plants we have that require special winter care.
DeleteI love your response to Dave. Covfefe is the correct response to almost anything!
ReplyDeleteAnd it's such a great word, whatever it means.
DeleteCovfefe was comparably the smartest thing Trump ever tweeted.
ReplyDeleteHa! He certainly influenced the culture with that one.
DeleteYup. I'm a big fan of the Covfefe response too. That'll show them Trekkies!
ReplyDeleteI don't think the Romulans even had a language in the first series of "Star Trek," which is the one I know. All that stuff came with "Next Generation" and after.
DeleteI wouldn't understand anything from Star Trek. To me, orange buttface is much worse than Nixon, but maybe that's because I was a kid when everything happened with Nixon. I know so much more now. Too many journalists are capitulating to the orange menace.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Nixon was pretty bad, but at least he had a sense of shame about it all. The fact that Roger Stone was a Nixon adviser and is now on Trump's team says it all.
DeleteThe flowers all looks so pretty. You are lucky to have such color all around you.
ReplyDelete