Spring Bulbs
Summer Bulbs
History of the Bulb
Gardening Advice
Landscaping Ideas
Planting Help and FAQ
Bulb Cultivation Techniques
Bulb Production
 
  Your Name:  
  Your Email:  
     

Everything a gardener needs!

Perennial Coreopsis / "Tickseed" Home Page

The Desmond Carnation

Prized for its dependable nature and colorful, daisylike flowers, coreopsis has a long bloom period and is generally troublefree and easy to grow. Another common name is tickseed.

Coreopsis is tolerant of a variety of soil types and environmental conditions, making it a popular choice for home gardeners. Tall varieties can reach 4 feet in height and are good for the back of the border and in cutting gardens. Shorter, mounding varieties are more delicate and good for edging. Most coreopsis sport yellow flowers, although a pink variety is also available.

Plant in spring, spacing plants 2 to 3 feet apart, depending on the variety. Prepare the garden bed by using a garden fork or tiller to loosen the soil to a depth of 12 to 15 inches, then mix in a 2- to 4-inch layer of compost. Dig a hole twice the diameter of the pot the plant is in.

Carefully remove the Coreopsis from its container and place it in the hole so the top of the root ball is level with the soil surface. Carefully fill in around the root ball and firm the soil gently. Water thoroughly.Apply a thin layer of compost each spring, followed by a 2-inch layer of mulch to retain moisture and control weeds. Water plants during the summer if rainfall is less than 1 inch per week. Stake tall varieties to keep them upright. After the first killing frost, cut stems back to an inch or two above soil line. Divide plants every few years as new growth begins in the spring, lifting plants and dividing them into clumps.

Some of our Favorite Careopsis:

Pink Coreopsis Pink Coreopsis
Unique, pink daisylike flowers bloom all summer and into the fall. 10-12" tall with 14-18" spread. Pink Coreopsis superb for the rockery, as a ground cover or in borders and containers.
More Info

Moonbeam Coreopsis Moonbeam Coreopsis
Blooms all summer! Lemon-yellow flowers amid fernlike foliage on 18-24” plants. Drought, mildew resistant. Space 14-18”. The Moonbeam Coreopsis was 1992 Perennial Plant of the Year.
More Info
Sterntaler Coreopsis Sterntaler Coreopsis
Golden flowers with unusual, reddish- brown center circles and tattered petal edges. Blooms from May through fall, so you'll have lots of time to cut its many stems for arrangements. Graceful, upright and bushy form.
more info

More Careopsis Info:

Calliopsis is an easy-to-grow annual that can be sown directly where it is to flower and thinned to 15-30 cm apart, depending on variety. Or for early flowering in the north, plants can be started indoors and planted out without disturbing the roots in late May or early June. Flowering starts normally in the last week of June from an early May sowing. They make brilliant displays of green foliage and golden yellow/mahogany-red bicolored flowers, best massed in wilder parts of the garden, sunny meadows and slopes, where the floppiness of the stems is OK. They thrive in sun and even in poor, dry soil. They self sow and the young seedlings can be easily transplanted where desired. In flower borders they benefit from regular deadheading for tidiness and continued blooming throughout the season. Low-growing varieties are suited to edging and bedding. As cut flowers Calliopsis will keep about a week in water.

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Coreopsis


Complete List of Available Coreopsis



Back to Buying Guide

Home

Copyright 2005© MyWebGarden.com. All rights reserved.