
For the past few years, I have really been overly indulgent with the seed catalogues from Renee’s Garden. I wanted to try more varieties of classic annual cosmos, Cosmos bipinnatus, than I could fit in my garden. I recently grew ‘White Seashells’ with tubular ray flowers, and colorful ‘Double Click’ with ruffled semi-double and double flowers, and even the ‘Dancing Petticoats’ mix, which includes several varieties! By now, I have probably grown all but a few of the many offerings.
After trying so many though, I still can not tell you which are my favorites. It would not matter much anyway, since I did not deadhead them to deprive them of their abundant seeds. Their self sown progeny are now mixed and beginning to bloom in random shades of pink ranging from pale pink to nearly red to nearly purple, with a few white.
Naturalized cosmos eventually reverts to bloom with more genetically basic single flowers in simpler shades of pink and white, on stems about three or four feet tall. They can even get taller than six feet and wider than two feet. Most of the popular garden varieties that I started out with though stay less than three feet tall. ‘Sonata’ is a popular strain that stays even shorter, so is among the most practical and proportionate for refined gardens.
Seed can be sown or new plants can be planted now to bloom through summer. Naturalized plants are already blooming only because they get an earlier start. Regardless of color or form, all cosmos flowers are about three inches wide, with yellow centers. Their finely textured pale green foliage is quite delicate and airy.
Have you grown the orange and yellow ones? C. polidor? I go back to these every year as they flower so prolifically and sometimes even set seed the following year if we have a mild winter. I couldn’t choose a favourite though either! This year I am trying a new one to me called Xsenia.
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Wow, that is a name that I have not heard in a long time! Actually, I may have never heard of that particular variety. I met Cosmos sulphureus while studying horticulture in the late 1980s, was impressed by it, but then never saw it again. I do not remember if ‘Polidor’ was available at the time. Although I am quite fond of the common sorts of Cosmos, I sort of preferred the less froufrou bloom of Cosmos sulphureus. I thought that it looks more like a wildflower. Besides, the bright yellow and orange floral color would have been more comparable with the garden of my home at the time.
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Oh yes, C. sulphureus was one of the first ones I grew, but is not common here. Everyone seems to prefer the pink ones.
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