Baltimore Sun Sunday

Fabulous Flambé Yellow

This chrysocepa­lum perfectly blends Pantone’s colors of the year

- By Norman Winter

Pantone, the gurus of all things color, has selected Ultimate Gray and Illuminati­ng Yellow for the 2021 colors of the year.

Some headlines call it “Pandemic Gray” but

The Garden Guy loves it, and you will see it opens the door to one of the toughest, perseverin­g and award-winning plants of all time, Flambé Yellow chrysoceph­alum.

Flambé Yellow gives you both pantone colors on one plant. Silver-gray leaves and stems partnered with yellow button flowers that are produced nonstop all growing season.

It has won 85 awards from Florida, Georgia, Texas and Delaware to Penn State and Cornell. There aren’t too many plants that can match this trophy case.

Known botanicall­y as Chrysoceph­alum apiculatum, Flambé is from Tasmania and Australia and has the common name strawflowe­r, though it does not resemble the large selections we call Bracteanth­a.

It was selected as a Mississipp­i Medallion Award Winner while The Garden Guy was a horticultu­re specialist with Mississipp­i State University.

You might wonder what’s so special about a plant with a name that is difficult to pronounce. The answer is nonstop blooms on a plant that is drought tolerant, heat tolerant and frost tolerant to around 30 degrees.

In our Mississipp­i

State University trials, it bloomed with its small button-like flowers of orange or yellow from May right up until hard freezes in November or December. Gardeners in zones 9 and 10 may find it returns in the spring as a perennial with explicit drainage, but the rest of us will enjoy it as an annual, and one that is of exceptiona­l value.

The Flambé chrysocepa­lum is available in orange and yellow. The Flambé Yellow has silver-gray leaves while the Flambé Orange has olive-green foliage. The plants are trailing, reaching about

8 to 15 inches tall. This trailing habit means they are wonderful in mixed containers.

Combine the hot-colored Flambé Yellow with cool colors like Whirlwind Blue scaevola and this year’s new Whirlwind Starlight scaevola, which also happens to be from Australia.

The Artist Blue ageratum creates a dazzling complement­ary partnershi­p with its deep-blue violet flowers.

For a taller, blue-flowered companion, combine it with salvias such as Rockin’ Blue Suede Shoes, Rockin’ Playin’ the Blues and the trendy Unplugged So Blue.

Another stunning partnershi­p would be to

partner Flambé with Truffula Pink gomphrena, the hottest pollinator plant in the country. It produces

iridescent hot-pink balls that look like small exploding fireworks. Its toughness and longevity will match

perfectly with Flambé Yellow.

With its drought-tolerant nature, do pay attention

and avoid overwateri­ng. Make sure it has good drainage, sun and fertile soil, and you will find easy success.

If you are plagued with tight, compacted clay, then loosen the soil with 3 to 4 inches of organic matter or plant on raised beds.

Though drought tolerant and ruggedly perseverin­g, it is a good idea to apply a layer of mulch to conserve moisture and deter weeds. You’ll find maintenanc­e easy because there is no deadheadin­g required. The spent flowers are quickly covered by new growth and more colorful blossoms.

Most would have thought that when Pantone picked gray and yellow, it would have been difficult to carry the scheme to the flower border or mixed containers.

But the award-winning Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r makes it wonderfull­y easy and beautiful.

“We will be on that stage. The stage where the ‘best of the best’ meet.”

— Nets’ Kyrie Irving posted on Instagram on Saturday morning after the Nets lost two straight

 ?? NORMAN WINTER/TNS PHOTOS ?? Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r, with its gray leaves and stems, fits the 2021 Pantone colors of the year almost to perfection.
NORMAN WINTER/TNS PHOTOS Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r, with its gray leaves and stems, fits the 2021 Pantone colors of the year almost to perfection.
 ??  ?? Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r and Whirlwind Blue scaevola both originate in Australia and are tough-as-nails in the summer.
Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r and Whirlwind Blue scaevola both originate in Australia and are tough-as-nails in the summer.
 ??  ?? Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r and Supertunia Royal Velvet petunia form an incredible partnershi­p of color.
Flambé Yellow strawflowe­r and Supertunia Royal Velvet petunia form an incredible partnershi­p of color.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States