| Missouri Environment and Garden |
Volume 9, No. 7 |
| News for Missouri’s Gardens, Yards and Resources |
July 2003 |
Summer Care for Fall-blooming Perennials
Chrysanthemums are one of the showiest and reliable perennials in
the fall garden. However, for optimum performance, some simple
steps should be followed in early spring to mid-summer. Mums should
be divided once a year in early spring. Dig up the entire plant and
separate growing shoots and discard older, woody, central parts of
the plant. To get compact, bushy plants with lots of flower buds,
pinch the growing tips as soon as the plants are 6 to 8 inches high.
This stimulates branching and the onset of more flower buds. Within
weeks after pinching, new shoots will form. When these new shoots
are 6 to 8 inches long, pinch back again. In Missouri, pinch three
to six times until mid-July. After the second or third week in
July, discontinue pinching and allow the plant to fully develop
flower buds. Mums also need regular watering because their roots
tend to be shallow. Drought will cause woody, stunted growth. Mums
are also heavy feeders and require regular fertilizing until
mid-August. To increase the survival rate in the winter, avoid
pruning mums back after frost hits. A horticulture professor at
Iowa State University tested 19 varieties and found that plants left
unpruned survived the winter better than those that were cut back in
the fall.

New England Aster |
Another flower prized for their brilliant late-autumn bloom and long
bloom period are perennial asters. Asters provide a wonderful way
to usher in the autumn season with magnificent flowers well past the
first frost. Aster flowers also provide nectar for migrating
monarch butterflies each fall. There are many different varieties
of asters. One of the showiest is the native aster, New England
aster (Aster novae-angliae), which grows throughout much of
Missouri. Among some of the more popular varieties for a compact,
bushy growth habit are Patricia Ballard, Professor Kippenberg, and
Alma Potschke. For optimum performance, asters should be dug up and
divided every two to three years. As with mums, select for
replanting the vigorous outer shoots and discard the woody central
growth. Asters tend to grow tall and somewhat leggy; however,
cutting stems back halfway in early summer will make the plant
shorter, stronger, and bushier. Asters prefer well-drained soil and
a sunny location and tend to be quite drought tolerant.
Mary Kroening, Missouri Master Gardener Coordinator and UMC Horticulturalist, (573) 882-9633
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