Texarkana Gazette

Plan an azalea Bloom-A-Thon for your summer landscape

- Norman Winter On Gardening Tribune News Service

There has been an azalea bloom-athon at The Garden Guy’s house for the last six weeks and looks to not be stopping anytime soon. This has all been taking place in temperatur­es that have sometimes made me the irritable garden guy.

If you have not gotten on the bandwagon with re-blooming azaleas you are missing a real treat. I gave you a clue in the lead but they are so new you may not know about the Bloom-AThon series. At The Garden Guy’s house, the Bloom-a-Thon lavender flowers have been putting on a summer show that will rival any other azalea in the market.

The flowers are so large I had to get a tape measure to quantify. They are a whopping 3 1/2 inches wide. One of the real benefits to growing re-blooming azaleas is that they are in flower during peak butterfly season. So not only are butterflie­s hitting on them, but bees too!

It is not often I rave about plant structure when it comes to azaleas. Its not that they are in any way bad it is just usually they are ho-hum. This is not the case with Bloom-A-Thon lavender. These are mounded and evergreen, reaching about 4 feet tall and wide. This gives them the ability to provide the needed bones of the landscape when not in bloom.

Bloom-A-Thon Lavender azalea is recommende­d in zone 7a-9a and should be planted in fertile welldraine­d acid soil. The Garden Guy makes it a practice to incorporat­e organic matter into all azalea shrub beds. Add a layer of mulch after planting and again each year. The azalea keeps the roots near the soil surface and this annual decomposit­ion of mulch and organic matter will maintain a good environmen­t for new roots and help in moisture retention.

I have mine in a part sun area that is shifting through out the day. They do have the ability to tolerate a quite a bit of sun. The Bloom-A-Thon azaleas really do best in a filtered light to part sun area particular­ly in the south. I like them planted in curvy informal sweeps or clusters with odd numbers versus the formal toy soldier look.

In the bed where I am growing Bloom-a-Thon lavender, I wanted to create a complement­ary color scheme in front of a hedge of dwarf Burford hollies. So, I created a curve or sweep and partnered them with Florida Sunshine anise that has bright golden chartreuse foliage.

In my backyard I am growing Bloom-A-Thon red azaleas with blue re-blooming hydrangeas and Etched Glass hostas. I know there is an azalea-hydrangea partnershi­p coming. The variegated hostas and BloomA-Thon red azalea marriage should provide a look that is both gawdy and wonderful. I’ll keep you posted.

Proven Winners now has five colors in the Bloom-A-Thon series, lavender, pink double, hot pink, white and a red, that will steal your heart. The white is more compact or petite reaching about 3 feet tall and wide.

So yes, you can have a glorious spring azalea bloom and follow it up with an extra-long, late summer to fall bloom too, when you grow Bloom-AThon re-blooming azaleas.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Bloom-A-Thon Lavender azaleas have large flowers that are three and half inches wide.
Tribune News Service Bloom-A-Thon Lavender azaleas have large flowers that are three and half inches wide.
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