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Latin Name: Leucanthemum maximum 'Broadway
Lights'
Common Name: Yellow shasta daisy
Flowers: Pale yellow fading to white
Foliage: Dark green evergreen rosettes
Mature height: 24 inches in flower
Hardiness: Zones 5-9
Soil: Well-drained
Exposure: Full sun to light shade
Water usage: Medium
Sources: A Proven Winners introduction; see
www.provenwinners.com/findaretailer/ to find a retail location near
you.
Daisies! Say that word and almost everyone, gardener or
not, knows immediately what you're talking about. Personally, I think you
can tell how popular this particular flower shape is by how many different
plants use the name - how many different plants do you know that are
commonly called daisies? Hundreds! It's right up there with lily.
So what's special about this shasta daisy? Mainly, it's
yellow instead of the usual pure white. 'Broadway Lights' flowers open up
a nice, creamy yellow and with time fade to almost white. I like this
softer color because it blends well into mixed perennial borders with
blues, lavenders and pinks. Pure white daisies are nice, but they do tend
stick out like spotlights in the border.
'Broadway Lights' also has a longer flowering season
than most shasta daisies. Unlike some of the older cultivars, this variety
also is well-branched and doesn't need staking, as it gets only 2 feet
tall when in flower.
The evergreen clumps of foliage begin sending up flower
spikes in mid-April and continue until mid-June. Occasionally during fall,
you'll get a second showing of flowers. 'Broadway Lights,' like all shasta
daisies, needs well-drained soil and will not tolerate over-watering.
A trick to keep your shasta daisies growing and
vigorous is to separate them every couple of years. I've noticed that
clumps will tend to die out after three years or so, but if you dig the
plants in late fall or early spring and separate them, the plants keep
their vigor and will reward you with many more flowers. Plus, you will
look like the gardening god to your neighbors when you show up with an arm
load of shasta plants asking if they want some!
About the author: Jimmy Turner is the Director of
Horticulture Research at the Dallas Arboretum. For more plant profiles by
Jimmy, subscribe to
Neil Sperry's GARDENS Magazine. |