Anyway, today, it was a bag of Tigridia, the tiger flower, that caught my eye. Having never seen them before, and seeing that they were promoted as "Sun Lovers" (see the package below), my first thoughts were a) "That would be good for a novelty," and b) "I wonder if they are hardy here?" The packaging didn't list a USDA hardiness zone, but it did have one of those wonders of modern convenience, a QR Code, pictured here at the right. And I, being ProfessorRoush and of an early technologic bent, have just such a code-reading app on my Smart Phone. Go ahead, try it out. It works on the screen too.
So there are the
Tigridia, on sale at Home Depot, and here you are, the technically-proficient
and thoroughly modern gardener. The package QR Code links you for more information to the
Longwood Gardens website. And what do you find? The message"LFGinfo.com
spring bulbs coming soon." To quote the Peanut's character, Charlie Brown, "Aaarrrgggh!"
HELLO! STOP TEASING ME WITH YOUR PROMISES OF KNOWLEDGE! It's already Spring,
almost past it, in many parts of the country. I'm a poor, uneducated common gardener just looking for help. Do you think it is about time to post the necessary information up? Why put the QR code on the packaging if it is not even active yet?
I've since found out that Tigridia pavonia is only hardy to Zone 8, and further more, is short-lived, each flower blooming only for a day. Wonderful. I just purchased an annual daylily. Of a truly ugly magenta coloration. Just what I wanted.
I've since found out that Tigridia pavonia is only hardy to Zone 8, and further more, is short-lived, each flower blooming only for a day. Wonderful. I just purchased an annual daylily. Of a truly ugly magenta coloration. Just what I wanted.
Well, such runs the disappointments of our gardening lot. Doomed forever to take a $6.98 chance on twenty dehydrated, decrepit bulbs that I now find will, in fact, likely not survive winter in my Zone 6 climate. Tigridia is noted on one website to grow in Olathe, Kansas and Lincoln, Nebraska, if, like dahlias, you are industrious enough (or crazy enough) to dig them up every fall and replant every Spring.
I don't grow Dahlias for just that reason. As I've noted many times, digging and replanting bulbs in my stone ridden soil is a Sisyphean recipe for a broken back and a broken gardening spirit. But I will try to enjoy the Tigridia for this summer, fleeting as they may be. Those few flowers, at least, whose bulbs survive their dessicated state in my drought-stricken Kansas soil long enough to grow and bloom.