GARDENING Index
Diseases & Weeds
Flowers
Annuals & Perennials
Design
Florists
Maintenance
Planting / Transplanting
Types
Other

Fruits & Vegetables
General Information
Container Gardening
Insects & Pests
Kids Gardening
Lawns & Landscaping
Plants & Foliage
Public Gardens
Seasons & Zones
Services & Associations
Shrubs & Trees
Soil & Water
Structures & Ornaments
Tools
Water Gardening
Wildlife

BEST OF GARDENING
DIY Lawn Care
Lawn Selections
Weekend Projects

SPONSOR LINKS

  • Sunflowers Old and New
  • Master gardener Maureen Gilmer, host of Weekend Gardening, offers a history lesson and shares her secrets for growing sunflowers.


    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    If you top a sunflower stalk, it branches to produce a multitude of smaller flowers perfect for cutting. (All photos courtesy of Maureen Gilmer)

    Click here to view a larger image.

    This two-tone flower is typical of those developed for the floral trade that emphasize petal colors over seed production.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    If topped, sunflower plants produce flower buds at the joint where the leaf stem intersects with the central stalk.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Huge single flowers bearing a disproportionately large center distinguish those strains developed for seed production.


    May 26, 2008 — Thousands of years ago, American Indian women grew tired of traipsing off across the countryside to gather sunflower seed. Women coveted the seed because it provided so many uses for the family. The kernel could be made into flour, and the extracted oil made black hair shiny. Even the shells yielded a useful purple dye for hides, body and basket.

    Eons ago, perhaps one woman noticed that seeds beside her grinding stones sprouted and grew into full-grown plants. It flowered and produced seed right there at her fingertips. The next year she scattered a few more seeds and these too grew to supply her needs. It was not long until the tribes were planting the wild sunflower in the moist river-bottom silt of the Missouri River after the spring high water receded. Naturally, they saved the seed of those plants that yielded the largest seed-filled flowers.

    By the time Europeans entered this established agricultural world, American Indians had physically changed the wild sunflower. Through human selection, the flower size grew and the many-branched plant produced just one monstrous seed head. American Indians had succeeded in changing the native flora of North America, yielding a very different plant than its wild ancestor.

    In the 20th century, modern breeding techniques were unleashed upon the American sunflower. The old strains exploded into dozens of new varieties. These expanded the flower color from the familiar golden daisy to a vast array of hues from deep burgundy to fiery orange.

    Sunflowers have remained a garden favorite since pioneer times because they are affordable. No other plant gives so much visual change for just pennies. Their rapid growth and disease resistance have made them a favorite with children, who delight in watching their faces follow the sun across the summer sky. And kids naturally love to harvest the seed, too.

    When times grow hard and money is tight, we find ourselves going back to many of the old ways of Depression gardeners. These folks loved their sunflowers and grew them each year. As the buds follow the sun across the sky, even the young plants have personality. If seeds are not harvested for winter snacks, birds flock to the flowers to feed on them. This in turn keeps avian friends in the garden as a natural pest control; they devour unwanted insects that feed on crops stressed by the heat.

    Mammoth sunflowers are the seed lovers' choice. They feature a single large flower on top of a stalk that can reach 15 feet in height at maturity. These plants have been dwarfed to produce the four-foot "Sunny" and even the two-foot "Sunspot," both of which bear large wide-center flowers. The dwarf mammoths are exceptional for smaller gardens. The seed is available by mail at Gurney's Seed & Nursery Co., www.gurneys.com.

    For a fabulous show of color, plant the florist varieties, which produce a huge range of color and flower detailing on smaller, more manageable plants. For just a few dollars you can fill the whole garden with them. These are the renter's secret weapon for a fabulous seasonal show.

    You can buy standard mixed-color seed packets that produce plenty of range, but you don't know what's coming until the buds open. Gurney's offers a great sunflower deal that combines four potent-colored varieties of five-inch-wide flowers in reds, oranges and yellow. Each is separately packaged so you can create more-controlled color drifts.

    We often go looking far afield for new plants, because these are so widely advertised in magazines and catalogs and on the Internet. But everyone's grandmother knows there's no need to pay big bucks for a great garden. Even during hard times when there was not a penny to spare, she gathered her flower seed to save for next year.

    (Maureen Gilmer is a horticulturist and host of Weekend Gardening. E-mail her at mo@moplants.com. For more information, visit: www.moplants.com. Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.)

    Get DIY On Your TV. Just follow the instructions to see if DIY Network is available through your cable or satellite provider.

  • RELATED PROJECTS: