Baltimore Sun Sunday

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Double Take flowering quince series now offers 4 colors of huge double blooms

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Phil the groundhog predicted an early spring, and he was right on. Groundhog Day was Feb. 2 and spring arrived at my house Feb. 3. Great Scott, that was fast! I know I am slightly exaggerati­ng, but as I write this, I have the sunroom door open for any pollinator­s that might want to come inside and visit for a moment.

Though I have sort of joked about spring arriving, I did notice the first blooms of the season on my favorite flowering quince of all time, the Double Take Scarlet. Not only were blooms open but the first butterfly of the year showed up hitting on pansies and dianthus and, yes, the flowering quince too.

Once known as the Storm series, it has now become the Double Take series for the impressive double flowers that bloom over a really long period. I’ve been growing them for six years, and the number of days in bloom is amazing. The blooming period seems to start in early February and last until early April, which is simply incredible.

Since the last time I wrote about them, the series has added Double Take Peach, a most rare and wonderful color for the garden. With four colors to choose from — scarlet, peach, pink, orange — everyone should find a color to fit their palette.

Botanicall­y speaking, they are all selections of Chaenomele­s speciose, which is native to China. Proven Winners is bringing us these shrubs that will reach approximat­ely 6 feet tall and 4 feet wide at maturity, boasting dazzling double flowers with petal counts.

The old-fashioned flowering quince always seems to be bare of flowers on the tips or tops of the plant, but these blooms that reach up to 2 inches in diameter stretch outward to the tip of the stem. That means the blossoms are almost as large as a tennis ball. They are cold hardy from zones 5-9 and deer resistant.

Start shopping now to make sure you locate your source. If your local garden center doesn’t have them, you should be able to get them by mail order or online order. When you get yours, select a site in full to part sun. These great flowering quinces deserve to be planted in a well-prepared shrub bed. Incorporat­e 3 to 4 inches of organic matter. Till your soil deeply and dig your hole about three times as wide as the root ball, but no deeper. Place the flowering quince in the hole and backfill to two-thirds.

Tamp the soil and water to settle. Add the remaining backfill repeating the process, which is getting all of the air pockets out and providing a great start for acclimatiz­ation of your new shrub.

These plants bloom on old wood, so remember to not get prune-happy when they are in their deciduous or dormant state of winter. If any pruning is needed, make these cuts after the spring bloom. Of course, these make breathtaki­ng cut flowers, so select as needed.

You’ll love how the Double Take flowering quince partners with spring blooming bulbs like daffodils, Dutch iris and Peruvian lilies — and treasure a landscape that has them paired with dogwoods, redbuds and the old-fashioned snowball viburnum.

To me, the flowering quince has always been that harbinger of spring. It’s the one plant that shouts with its colorful blooms, “We

Have Survived Winter!” I know everyone is joking about what a short mild winter we have had. I assure you, in the South, a week is about all we can stand.

So, we’ll give Groundhog Phil the high-five and a heartfelt thanks. Those of you still in the big chill, start shopping for the Double Take flowering quinces so you can celebrate in style when spring really does arrive.

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