Milk-flowered bell: description, planting and care
The milk-flowered bell is a perennial plant with beautiful and fragrant flowers. Gardeners love this culture for its lush, and in some varieties, re-flowering, high frost resistance. Any variety is an excellent decoration for a flower garden, however, designers have many options for using an ornamental bush.
Description
The tall milky-flowered bell has a delightful appearance. The culture is not too pretentious about the quality of the soil, is winter-hardy, grows in the shade and in the sun, but does not like waterlogging.
Species characteristics:
- the twigs on the stems of the plant grow densely, so its crown is thick and lush;
- green leaves have a rough surface, the upper ones are rounded-oblong, the lower ones are located on short petioles;
- the height of an adult bell is from 1.5 to 1.7 m;
- very large inflorescences in the form of brushes with many flowers completely hide the foliage and stems, the size of the flowers is 4 cm in circumference;
- the color of the petals can be white, pale lilac, pale blue;
- the rhizome is strong, spreading, extending 50 cm into the ground.
A bell of this species can decorate a garden for up to 12 years; in the wild, the life of a plant is 20 years.
Varieties
The bell of this species has several varieties that are popular with gardeners.
- Loddon Anna - a plant that gives flowers of purple or pink color. In height, the bush is capable of reaching 1.25 m.
- The variety is distinguished by beautiful lilac flowers. "Superba"... Its height is 100-120 cm.
- Variety "Prithards Variety" - a plant with flowers, the petals of which are blue or lavender.
- Boring bell "Alba" blooms with white fragrant inflorescences, flower diameter - 6 cm.It is an unpretentious perennial 60 cm high.
- Quite high grade "Cerulea" has large caps of blue flowers, its height is from 70 to 100 cm.
- Dwarf view of the culture "Poof" grows up to 20-30 cm. It has white star-shaped flowers with a blue and delicate lavender shade, collected in a brush.
For different types of milk-flowering perennial, the same planting and care rules are provided, which novice plant breeders need to know about.
Planting and leaving
To successfully transplant milky-flowered crop varieties, you need to act extremely carefully and quickly so that the plants take root, and it is important to comply with the basic requirement - to transfer them to another place along with an earthen clod. Young seedlings, obtained by division, perceive transplantation better and adapt faster than adult specimens. The optimal time for this operation is spring and the last decade of summer.
A site for flowers is chosen not too open, with a shade from nearby trees or shrubs, making the sunlight diffused. Bells grow on any soil, but the soil must be loose enough to allow moisture and air to pass through.
When making holes for planting, their lower part is necessarily laid out with drainage material from small stones and coarse sand. The only compound to avoid is clay. Clay soil is diluted with sand and humus, light soils require compost and sod land. In low places, where water can accumulate in the spring after the snow melts, the crop is not planted.
You cannot fertilize the ground with fresh mullein or peat - such a composition will increase the acidity and can lead to fungal infections of the bush. If the planting process is scheduled for autumn, it is necessary to calculate the time so that the seedlings can take root and get stronger before the first frost.
Plants are planted away from large horticultural crops, and planted in a checkerboard pattern or at intervals of 30 to 60 cm - it all depends on how widely the variety grows. After planting, the seedlings should be watered with warm water, tightly tamping the soil under them.
The treatment consists of basic garden procedures:
- regular moderate watering;
- shading of young bells during hot days;
- loosening the earth to a depth of 6-7 cm after watering;
- garter of high grades to the supports.
It will be necessary to feed the seedlings only next spring - with urea and ammonium nitrate (no more than 40 g per 1 sq. M). Phosphorus and potassium are needed by the culture during bud formation.
In the fall, the flower bush requires pruning. In early October, the stems are cut off entirely from annual varieties, perennial plants are covered with litter and spruce branches or peat with a layer of 15-20 cm. In this state, the culture is able to calmly survive the winter cold.
Disease and pest control
With competent agricultural technology, the bell bushes are not threatened, in general, it is a disease-resistant culture with a fairly high immunity. but if the plant is not transplanted for a long time, then it can be susceptible to infectious diseases.
To prevent damage by bacteria, viruses, rust, ascomycete, moldy and marsupial fungi, it is necessary to carry out preventive spraying with special agents. The procedures are carried out in spring and autumn 2 times.
If the volume of water for irrigation is constantly exceeded, then the result of stagnant moisture is infection with a slobbery penny. This is a leafhopper from the order of isoptera, the larvae of which eat any species of cultivated and wild plants, and the bell is no exception. Will help from this misfortune solution of "Karbofos", "Kinmiks", the action of which leads to paralysis and death of the insect, but is safe for plants and soil.
The Inta-Vir remedy also helps against this pest, but it is toxic to bees. The best folk remedies for cicada are garlic water, infused for 2 hours (for 10 liters of a cup of cloves), soapy water or tobacco infusion.
An invasion of slugs that eat leaves, stems, young shoots can lead to the death of a plant, especially since they are often carriers of infectious diseases. As a rule, pests appear due to high humidity, so it is important to reconsider watering, regularly weed the tree-trunk circle of bells and mow the grass nearby. Mulching will also help prevent slugs, which have difficulty navigating through sawdust and coarse sand. You can use special insecticides, infusion of hot pepper or garlic, or make beer traps, collect slugs by hand, if there are not too many of them.
You can protect the culture from powdery mildew with the help of "Topaz". If you add 4 ml of the drug to 12 liters, this is enough to process 10 sq. m. area.
Reproduction
The bell can be propagated using the vegetative method - division, but for this only adult bushes are taken at the age of 3 years. It is customary to divide either at the end of spring or at the end of summer. The parent plant must be dug in a circle, watered and dug up completely. Then all branches are cut off from it, and the root system is divided into several parts. You can plant cuttings right away, but only in rainy weather, so as not to burn the plant in the sun.
If there are many divisions and they are small in size, first they will have to be planted in containers with a nutrient substrate and applied liquid fertilizer - for better rooting.
The seed method is also not difficult. First, the fruits that are darkened to a brown color are collected, then they are dried, and the seeds are immediately sown into open soil (in May or early October, when it is still warm). Growing seedlings with further spring movement into the ground is also allowed, then sowing them in containers should be started in March.
Certain varieties, including bells with double flowers, do not make sense to propagate by seeds, since they do not inherit varietal traits from the mother plant. Therefore, they need to be bred by dividing the bushes.
You can also cut the plant with new shoots, broken off from the base of the bush in the spring. They are usually then planted in rooting containers and left until transplanted the following spring.
Use in landscape design
The perennial winter-hardy bell is so magnificent during flowering that it will become a real attraction in any garden. Delicate lilac and blue, as well as white inflorescences with a pleasant aroma at different flowering periods of varieties will allow you to admire the lush flowering bushes all summer long.
Ornamental culture is widely used in the landscape of the site:
- bell bushes look spectacular among picturesque stones and perennial grasses;
- an original composition can be obtained by combining a culture with cereal plants, large roses, wild flowers;
- high and low varieties of bells are successfully used in the design of reservoirs;
- low bushes are suitable for rockeries and alpine slides;
- ideal combination of flowers with dwarf conifers of shrubs and trees;
- bushes planted around lawns or flower beds create a pleasant framing;
- in the same way, they can be planted near garden paths as curbs;
- high varieties can serve as a backdrop for a mixborder, but also become a central figure on the lawn.
Designers believe that combinations of several varieties of this garden culture look great, the main thing is to place them tastefully.
You can learn more about the milk-flowered bell from the video.
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