Goodbye to all that....
"Tom" wrote in message
...
On Saturday, 25 August 2012 10:31:45 UTC+1, haaark wrote:
The dahlias have-at last- got flower buds on them. They're a new
variety, so at least I'll see what they look like before I have to dig
them up.
Depends where you live. In NE England my neighbour used to laboriously dig
his dozens of dahlias up, immediately following the first frosts of autumn,
wash the roots free of soil, dust them with flowers of sulphur and store
them under his bed (his missus was less than impressed!).
Since being down here, I've never moved mine inside at all (I've a dozen or
so). They all come through the winter and D. 'Bishop of Llandaff' has
self-seeded every year, with seedlings coming up each spring throughout the
garden. We've had -12C or worse in that time and that's done for a number
of tender plants, but unlike the 1980s in the NE, I don't think it's ever
lasted long enough to penetrate far enough into the ground to damage the
dahlia tubers.
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I get lovely dahlias year after year, never do anything to them!
We rarely get harsh frosts though, snow yes, severe frost - no (too windy).
Will (Haytor, Devon, 1017 feet asl)
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