Wednesday, September 3, 2014

National Dahlia Day

National Dahlia Day




Today we celebrate the Dahlia, one of the most beautiful and diverse flowers on earth.
The Dahlia is not native to North America or Europe, but is one of the wonderful gifts of
Colombia and Mexico to the world.  They were brought by the Spanish to Europe and
then back to North America.  They are one of the most popular garden flowers in the USA.
These are some pictures of Dahlias which I have taken in San Francisco, Chicago, and
Montreal





Dahlia petals spring forth with light
To guide us through the darkest night.
A proof of God inside us all,
They stand, so perfect, true and tall.

My head I bow in thanks devout
How could I ever've raised a doubt,
When sun and rain are all they need,
If love is shared, they will succeed.






Dahlias are easy to grow and hardy.  By mid August they are five feet high and covered
with flowers.  They continue blooming until the first real frost.  In the north, 
you must take their tuber roots out of the ground and store them in a cool, 
dry place until next spring.  Dahlias range in size from an inch across to the giant 
dinner plate dahlias, which are more than 12 inches in diameter.





The white dahlia above is the simple traditional flower with eight petals.  It has been
hybridized into all sorts of colors and forms and sizes.

 Dahlias are special in many ways.  They are divine delights.  They send out light,
     like life, in a million different hues.  Symmetrical, they are big, brazen and brilliant.   
     They dazzle you with colors likely never seen.  They are late-Summer bloomers, a hopeful 
       metaphor - that.  They grow easily if given sunlight and lots of water.  But it may take 
         a season.  They need support to climb to their peak.  And they are widely used as 
          herbal medicines. Mexico and San Francisco have made Dahlias their official flowers.
         True, they lack the fragrance of roses, but unlike roses, they do not prickle.







This is a Dinner Plate Dahlia,which is more than 12 inches in diameter.  In Golden Gate Park
in San Francisco, the city honors its official flower with its own special garden with 
hundreds of varieties and colors of dahlias.  Be sure and visit.  It is only a few minutes walk
south of the Museum of Fine Arts and the Science Museum







Dahlia flowers look beautiful when cut and floating in a bowl of water.




"Bahama Mama"  Dahlia  in  the  Bulb  Garden



"Diva" deep purple dahlia  in  Bulb  Garden



"Junkyard Dog Dahlia."  I don't know where the name came from,
but is on all the ID tags in the garden.  But it's beautiful and large.


"Louie Meggos"  Dinner Plate Mum - 12 inches across




"Coral Spiders" is the name of this variety.






A pure white double dahlia - "Iceberg."






"Peach Pomade."  The peach and orange colors are particularly subtle.






Traditional lavender dahlias with a few frills.






"Morning Sunrise" shows some of the multi-colored petals.









"Alice Reilly" is supposed to be in honor the color of the lingerie favored by one of
King Edward VII's mistresses.







Pink and magenta make a wonderful combination.







"Double Peach Pompoms."







This was a featured flower at the Chicago Botanic Gardens - "Brittany Rey."





"Raspberry Ripple" is the name of this delicious two-toned blossom.

Joseph Haydn's "The Dahlia Sonata," composed, it is said,
shortly after he saw his first dahlias from South America.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWF-48jIrSU






"Yellow Dinner Plate Dahlia"





Hot Orange Dahlia






"Brittany Rey" variant





"Bahama Mama" - Let's dance!






Traditional Pink 8 Petaled Dahlias
__________________


Pale and translucent as pink lemonade, 
the morning sun filtered its petals
to pure lightness; 

a saffron haze
near the stem, pallid fuchsia at its tips, 
it yawns, unfurling its petals into
the summer air laden with mist 
and amber seed.

The leaves cluster around its stem, 
as though protecting its emerald heart
from the gardener’s shears; 
every day an excruciating uncertainty; 

the bees burrow deep
into its fuzzy heart
the way the pestle enters
the mortar; their famished
mouths can decimate
the life from this fragile bloom.

Every day the gardener
parks his rusty wheelbarrow
by the garden gate, 
green with leaves and ivy, 
and considers
plucking the precious blossom
from the sill; 

an executioner of the garden, 
the dahlia’s life dependant
upon his will. 







"Brittany Rey" Variant

Dahlias traditionally signify elegance and dignity.







Dinner Plate Fringed Yellow Dahlia - 14 in. in diameter





Pink Dinner Plate Dahlia near my sister's house - 14 in. across.






"Purple Punctuation"






"Peppermint Patty"






"Snow Princess" frilled white dahlia






"My Lady's Powder Puff" pink and white dahlia






"The Bishop of York Dahlia"






"Lemon Chiffon Dinner Plate Dahlia" more than a foot across.


Franz Schubert's "Upon Seeing a Yellow Dahlia."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xX4NH7yHFKI




"Pink Fluff"







Pink and Yellow Spider Dahlia







Burst of Sunlight
__________________________

Dahlia, dear dahlia, with colors so bright,
You brighten my garden with all your delight.

There you are strong standing tall on your stem,
Among the other flowers, you are the gem.

Yellow, peach, white, pink and red,
Your colors enrich the garden bed.

As your flowers fade and petals scatter on the ground,
I lock your memory away in my heart to be found.




Traditional 8 petaled pink and purple dahlia






"Bird of Paradise" Dahlia






"Victorian Treasure"

_________________________________


I hope you have enjoyed these dahlias, and maybe you will plant a few
in your garden next year.  : - )



__





1 comment:

  1. Alexander,

    I am a volunteer working on this year's Friends' School Plant Sale in St. Paul, MN. Our sale has grown to be the largest annual plant sale in Minnesota; it raises a good deal of scholarship money for the school and has for 30 years. We have a wonderful print catalog each year, but it can only accommodate photos of a small percentage of the plants we offer. Our goal is to have a picture of each plant offered on the website. I am a volunteer tasked with finding the pictures for new plants for the online catalog and I am have a difficult time finding good photos of a dahlia 'Iceberg.'

    You have a beautiful photos of then on this blog page.

    Might we use your photo? Proper attribution would be given.

    If we find others that we need, might we use them as well?

    If you would like to know more about our plant sale, here is our website: http://www.friendsschoolplantsale.com/history/ or you can ask me!

    Thanks,
    Laurie

    ReplyDelete