Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Containers and flowers work together

- NORMAN WINTER

The Garden Guy sees a lot of needless garden stress when it comes to choosing plant partners for your containers. After watching the excitement that Andrea Owens Schnapp created with a shared photo on my Facebook page, the answer to this stress may just be to go mono-a-mono.

Obviously, I am taking a gardener approach to mono-a-mono, but Andrea taught us all a couple of lessons. First off many of us had never heard of the plant she shared. I for one am supposed to know these things. She shared with me one of her favorite petunias, Supertunia Raspberry Rush. Wow, where did this come from?

This photo that has reached well over 50,000 likes on my Facebook page should be like a megaphone shout-out to both greenhouse growers and retailers alike. This is one beautiful petunia that many of us have not had the opportunit­y to buy.

One is also a key word as this was the only plant in a dazzling turquoise glazed container. Supertunia Raspberry Rush has won Top Performer Awards all over the place, which makes it hard to understand why so many of us haven’t had the opportunit­y to buy it.

It reaches about 12 inches tall with a 24-inch spread. And one gets the feeling looking at Andrea’s photo from Florida, it has the potential of growing even more.

The comments from my Facebook followers showed a love for both the Supertunia and the colorful container. So, one way to look at this is that the container itself served as the colorful companion. The container was also large enough to allow the Supertunia to be all it could be.

As drop-dead gorgeous as this was, Andrea hit it out of the park with another glazed container of similar color but different textural pattern. In this container, monocultur­e again, was the new Supertunia Persimmon. There is just something about the orange and yellow blossoms up against turquoise.

Though Supertunia Persimmon is still considered very new, it has won a lot of Top Performer Awards and Perfect Score in University of Tennessee trials. Both pictures make you wonder how another plant would have even contribute­d to the containers. Monocultur­e can really be a good option when it comes to containers.

Mono-a-mono does have an applicatio­n when it comes to containers. Andrea, who is a trained horticultu­rist and now serves as a Master Gardener, chose to group several containers together on her patio. Though each container has only one plant, the cluster looks like a garden when placed together.

The Garden Guy has a lot of containers to maintain and to reach the look that Andrea has, especially in Florida, takes frequent watering and feeding. In Georgia where I garden, I use the best potting soil I can get my hands on, water daily and feed with a water-soluble mix every two to three weeks. It becomes like a liquid blue jug brigade.

I’ve got quite a few of last year’s Supertunia­s, Superbells and Superbenas about ready to bloom. This year’s plant orders will arrive sometime in April. But these early Supers in bloom will be happening because I cut back last August and trimmed a little coming out of this winter.

I want to give a shout out to Andrea Owens Schnapp in Florida for reminding us not only of the varieties out there, but that monocultur­e can be a beautiful style.

 ?? (Courtesy of Andrea Owens Schnapp via TNS) ?? Supertunia Persimmon (left) is very new in the market. In Florida the glazed turquoise container looks dazzling with the orange and yellow blossoms. Supertunia Raspberry Rush (right) is an award-winning petunia reaching 12-inches tall with a spread about 24-inches. It shows the beauty that a single plant can create in a glazed container.
(Courtesy of Andrea Owens Schnapp via TNS) Supertunia Persimmon (left) is very new in the market. In Florida the glazed turquoise container looks dazzling with the orange and yellow blossoms. Supertunia Raspberry Rush (right) is an award-winning petunia reaching 12-inches tall with a spread about 24-inches. It shows the beauty that a single plant can create in a glazed container.
 ?? ??
 ?? (Courtesy of Andrea Owens Schnapp via TNS) ?? Andrea Owens Schnapp clustered several monocultur­e pots together, creating the look of a garden.
(Courtesy of Andrea Owens Schnapp via TNS) Andrea Owens Schnapp clustered several monocultur­e pots together, creating the look of a garden.

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