Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Daisies bring a sunny look to any garden landscape

- By Lee Reich Associated Press

Give a child a box of crayons and a piece of paper, and ask for a f lower, and you very likely will get a picture of a daisy.

Daisies also hold attraction for poets. Geoffrey Chaucer, English poet of the 14th century, wrote “of all the floures in the mede, Thanne love I most thise floures white and rede, Swiche as men callen dayses in our toune.”

Daisies are my favorite, too. For me, a daisy is the essence of “flowerness.”

What makes a flower a daisy? The child’s daisy is a circle surrounded by strap-like petals, their bases attached to the circle. To the botanist and gardener, the meaning of “daisy” is not so simple. The botanist explains that the daisy is a composite f lower made up of many small, individual f lorets. Those f lorets that make up the eye of the daisy have inconspicu­ous petals.

A different type of floret, the so-called ray florets, skirt the daisy’s eye, and each has one large, outward-pointing petal. The petals you actually see on a daisy flower are those from the ray f lorets.

What is a daisy?

Botanicall­y, all daisies are in the Compositae, or daisy, family. But that family also includes many other plants not commonly called daisies. Lettuce and zinnias, for example.

The daisy family has two subdivisio­ns, one of which is exemplifie­d by the child’s flower drawing, sunflowers, coneflower­s and other daisies with “eyes.” For examples of the other subdivisio­n, look closely at a dandelion or chicory flower; in these flowers, all the florets are ray florets, each with a single, large, straplike petal. There is no eye to these flowers.

The original “daisy” of poetry and literature is the English daisy, Bellis peren

nis. These squat, cheerful flowers, with yellow discs surrounded by petals in shades from deep-rose to white, originated in the grassy fields of England. Now they are widespread in America, too. Cultivated forms have been bred to have so many rows of petals that their yellow eyes often are hidden. These plants self-sow readily to give seedlings that revert to the “wild” form with a single row of petals, in which case they sometimes are considered weeds as they invade lawns and gardens.

So many flowers with “daisy” in their names

Nowadays, we gardeners use the word “daisy” to represent many different flowers in the daisy family. In the chrysanthe­mum genus, for example, there’s the ox-eye daisy (C. leucanthem­um), its white petals encircling a clear yellow disc. It’s a familiar roadside plant. This plant, like the English daisy, was a native of Europe, but has firmly establishe­d itself in America (many consider it a weed).

Other perennial chrysanthe­mum daisies include the Nippon daisy (C. nipponicum), also with white petals, and the painted daisy (C. coccineum), whose red, pink or white flowers begin their show in early summer. Next spring, I will plant a sweep of pastel landscape with African daisies (Arctotis grandis), whose petals, white skyward over lavender undersides, surround steel-blue centers.

In contrast, individual attention is demanded from each flower of Transvaal daisies (Gerbera jamesonii), which blossom in shades of salmon, pink and apricot in clay pots on my terrace.

A green thumb isn’t required to enjoy daisies. Most are hardy plants, free from pests, and able to tolerate poor, dry soils.

If daisies have captured your fancy, sow seeds of perennial forms now. Sow seeds of annual daisies next spring.

Daisies are adaptable plants that can bring their sunny dispositio­n to the formal garden, cottage garden, meadow or abandoned lot. After all, the name daisy comes from a reference to the sun, “day’s eye.”

 ?? (Lee Reich via AP) ?? Zahara Yellow zinnias in New Paltz. Zinnias are one of many members of the daisy family, many of which can brighten up a garden with their sunny faces.
(Lee Reich via AP) Zahara Yellow zinnias in New Paltz. Zinnias are one of many members of the daisy family, many of which can brighten up a garden with their sunny faces.

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