GROWING DAHLIAS IN CONTAINERS
Text and Photos © 1995-2000 by Barbara Jenke
(Do not use for any commercial use without the permission of the
author)
Hot Springs, South Dakota
When I first started to grow dahlias in containers, I was frustrated
because I could not find anything written in the general gardening
magazines or books on this subject. The first years I grew only
those dahlias listed as "dwarf" or "low growing."
One year I realized that if I could grow a dwarf tree or bush
in a tub, I could cultivate any height of dahlia in a container.
A dwarf variety may be a bit easier to handle, but raising 4 feet
or taller dahlia bushes is just as easy, and could make a nice
privacy hedge on a patio or balcony. Different heights of dahlias
also add variations of elevations to a deck garden as well as
adding different colors and textures from the flowers' different
forms and sizes.
Over the years I've had to deal with a short summer growing season
with gentle-or monsoon- type rains; summers of heat and drought
with or without muggy humidity; or the coolest, wettest foggiest
conditions; still air to refreshing breezes to wind gusts of 50-60+
MPH; cool days with cumulus clouded skies
or bright sunny hot days; thunderstorms; electrical storms; or
hailstorms. Through these schizophrenic weather conditions I've
experimented with different potting soils, fertilizers, staking,
how to start the tubers without having them rot, etc. It's been
a challenge, but I've developed a method of planting dahlias in
containers which has been successful for me.
By starting the tubers indoors during the first week in April, I have had some early varieties start to flower by the last week in June. Because of weather conditions, most dahlia suppliers don't send the tubers until at least the first week in April. I probably could start my over wintered tubers earlier than April, but I am usually too busy sowing seeds and transplanting seedlings of other annuals and perennials.
When I get the tubers out of storage or when they arrive in the
mail, I inspect them for rot and look for good eyes. As I check
each one against its invoice and write down any bonus tuber I
may have been sent, the tuber is laid horizontally in trays with
the eyes (or any growth which has already begun) facing up. I
make sure that each tuber is identified either by having its name
written on it or making a plant label for it and laying the tuber
on the label. Tubers which look like they have no eyes or damaged
eyes(sometimes stems break off in shipment) are placed in individual
small trays on moist potting soil. This way I can watch them closely
for any signs of sprouting and don't waste time and energy planting
a tuber which won't sprout a new stem.
The tubers should be planted before the roots start to grow and
get entangled in the flats. Separating the roots damages them.
While they are forming new root hairs, it delays the plants' upward
growth and first bloom date.
I use heavy-weight, sturdy, plastic pots in which I can
drill holes for the later described stake inserting procedure.
The diameters of pots I usually use are 8 1/2-inches and 10 1/2-inches.
I have a few 11-inch and 12-inch pots for planting really long
tubers. For base stability, I prefer the azalea style of pot,
meaning that a pot has a short height in relation to its diameter
which makes it look short and squat, as opposed to a tall, skinny
looking container. I do not match pot size to the final bloom
size, because miniature flowers could be on a tall bush and giant
blooms could be on a short plant. I match the pot to how tall
the plant could be or the length of the tuber.
Use a clean container! A dirty pot could spread a disease
to the plant or have unseen insect eggs in it. Before placing
the potting mix in the container, I remove the saucer from
the base of the pot. This will allow the excess water to drain
and keep the soil from becoming water-logged from the daily drenching
rains we can receive. If there are not enough holes or the holes
are too small for fast drainage in the base of the container,
drill another hole or two in the bottom to enhance drainage.
In the container, if the tuber is placed in the bottom
of the pot and then the potting soil is immediately filled in
up to 1-inch below the rim and then is thoroughly watered, the
tuber could very likely rot. Planted higher up to prevent rotting,
the tuber would become exposed to the surface and the base of
the stalk would be sitting on the surface of the soil. Then the
stalk could the be easily broken off from the tuber.
When planted in the ground, directions usually state to dig a
hole about five to six inches deep and fill in the hole with soil
as the plant grows. I learned the best way to plant the container
grown dahlia is to plant the tuber by following the same method:
plant the tuber deeply and slowly add more potting soil as the
plant grows.
The potting mix I use is a coarse soilless mix, Ball's
Growing Mix #2. It is a nice loose blend of fine bark, vermiculite,
peat, and perlite. I use it for all of my container plants. Grace
Sierra has a soilless mix which is like the Ball's Mix
#2 called Metro-Mix 700. I have noticed that garden
centers are selling other brands of coarse soilless mixes which
dahlias should like. Whatever potting mix you want to use, make
sure it is very loose whether wet or dry. Make sure the potting
soil does not have clay in it. Dahlias do not like to grow in
clay soil. The clay turns the soil into mud when wet or into a
block of cement if allowed to dry out.
An important "secret" ingredient I stir into
the potting soil when I plant the tuber is a product made of acrylic
copolymer crystals. The copolymer crystals absorb water and release
it to the roots of the plant when the soil dries out. They protect
the plant from being overwatered or dying in dry soil. The products
I have used are TerraSorb and Soil Moist.
They provide the added benefit of keeping the roots cool during
a hot day, and from keeping the soil (and tubers) from freezing
when the frost kills the top of the plants in the fall. I use
the copolymer crystals in all my containers of non-cactus plants.
What's nice is that if I don't have time to water on a hot day,
I don't have to worry about the plant dying.
The copolymer crystals are easier to work with in their reconstituted
form (slurry). Use the amounts for each pot diameter as directed
on the label. To turn Soil Moist crystals into slurry,
add 1 cup of warm water to 1 teaspoon of the crystals and wait
about 5 minutes. The slurry looks like little gelatin-looking
globs. I like to make a batch at time in a 3 quart container.
Left over slurry can be covered and stored for later use or allowed
to dry out and be stored for reconstituting at a later time. Please
watch out when used around children or pets! It is also very slippery
when wet!
Planting the tuber: Place an inexpensive, biodegradable
drip-coffee filter, or two if necessary, over the holes
on the bottom of the flower container in order to keep the
soil in and the sow(or other) bugs out. The roots will appreciate
the extra space that pot shards or rocks would have used.
Fill the flower pot 1/3 full with pre-moistened potting
soil. In that bottom layer, mix in an amount of copolymer slurry
as recommended by the package directions for the pot's diameter.
Try not to pull the coffee filters off the bottom pot holes.(The
soil and slurry can be combined outside of the pot and then put
back in) Lay the tuber horizontally on top of that layer of
mix and slurry. If at all possible, place the tuber so that
the eye end will be in the center of the pot. It is okay if this
can't be done. Many times I've had to place a 6"inch tuber
in an 8 1/2-inch pot. Just be sure to leave about 1/4-inch space
between the root (non-eye) end of the tuber and the side of the
pot to allow for roots to grow. If a sprout is already growing
out of an eye, place the tuber so that the sprout is pointing
upwards. Write the variety of plant and what other information
you want on a plant label, and insert it in the soil next to the
eye end of the tuber. This marks the spot where the stake will
go. It also keeps roots from growing in that spot.
Cover the tuber with more pre-moistened soil, but just enough
soil to hide it. The eyes may be exposed, if desired, to watch
for growth. Using a spray bottle filled with warm water, mist
the tuber until the surface is damp. Do NOT fill the container
to the top with potting soil at this time. By just covering
the tuber, the plant's growth can be easily watched and prevents
overwatering of the awakening tuber.
As the stalk grows, carefully add more potting soil to the
container, so as to not break the stalk from the eye of the tuber.
Do not cover the upper set of leaves. Do NOT add any
more of the copolymer slurry. The gel rises. If it's put in
at higher soil levels, lots of little globs of gel will be sitting
on the top of the soil after a heavy rain. Believe me, I know!
If started inside, place the containers under plant
lights. The dahlias should have light from above to keep them
from bending towards the light of a window and to grow compactly.
Set the lights about six inches from the tops of the pots of newly
planted tubers. Raise the lights as the plants grow. Suspending
the lamps from chains on hooks makes them easier to raise and
lower. I use plant gro lights or a combination of two fluorescent
lamps: one cool white and one warm white fluorescent
tube in a 48-inch two-lamp shop fixture. This provides the proper
light spectrum to raise plants without having to pay for the expensive
grow lights. I learned this from the Floralight Company
when I bought some of their stands. The timers are set at sunrise
to sunset times (12-14 hour days) The containers can be set near
a south window. Be sure to turn the pots so that stalks will grow
straight.
The stake should be inserted in the pot before the plant label
is covered by soil additions. Stakes help to prevent the stalks
and stems from breaking off in the wind or if/when the pot falls
over. Also, when uprighting or moving the pot, the stake can be
grabbed onto instead of the plant.
I prefer to use steel stakes which are covered in green plastic.
Besides being strong and easy to work with, they can be cleaned
and disinfected at the end of the growing season for use the next
year. (If you can only find bamboo stakes, then try doing what
I used to do: for added strength, tie three stakes together with
tape, tie wire or string.)
If the average height of the variety is known use that length
of stake. If not known, judge what length to use by the height
of the trunk when the stake is inserted. Otherwise, use a 4 ft
stake, because most dahlia plants seem to have an average height
of 4 feet.
To keep the stake upright, tie the stake to the container
using plant tie-wire (or string, if preferred). Drill 4 holes
in an "X" or "+" position (depending on
the plant's growth) in the sides of the pot near the rim. Cut
a piece of plant tie-wire at least four inches longer than the
diameter of the pot. Fold the wire in half and wrap the
middle of the wire around the stake at the same level with
the height of the pot's rim and twist the tie wire to the stake.
Remove the plant label which is near the eye end of the
tuber and replace it with the stake. Next, thread one
wire end through one of the pot's holes and twist to secure it,
then thread the other wire through the opposite hole and pull
the wire taught until the stake stands upright next to the stalk
of the plant. The base of the stake should touch the bottom
of the container. Repeat with the other set of holes. Occasionally,
two stakes may be needed if there are two main stalks growing
from the tuber. Tie the stalk(s) to the stake(s). Return the
plant label to its pot. (To keep the labels from becoming
separated from their pots, mainly due to curious baby raccoons,
I am going to experiment and use those aluminum name tags which
have tie-wires thread through holes in them and attach them to
the drilled holes in the pots.)
After being staked, when the plant has grown taller than the
top of the container, add the rest of the potting mix to within
one-inch of the top rim of the container. It is okay to cover
the leaves below the soil line.
When the plants get at least three or four sets of leaves,
pinch out the growth tip of the stalk. Pinching helps to
make a bushier, sturdier plant. It does not delay the blooming
time of the plant, but the plant does make more flowers. When
I don't pinch, I usually get tall, skinny plants. My husband and
I like larger as opposed to more flowers; so, the side buds get
pinched when they start to develop. The miniature flowered buds
don't get pinched.
Watering: While the plant is developing roots, let the
soil almost dry out before watering again. The copolymer crystals
will prevent the tubers from drying out. If the soil is kept too
wet before the roots and top growth get a good start, the tuber
may rot. Water the plants after adding more soil to the pot.
The city's water here is hard with a pH about 7.4 and contains
lots of calcium sulfate, magnesium, and other minerals. I understand
that dahlias like a soil towards the alkaline side, so this water's
pH does not seem to bother them (they grow and bloom well!).
The indoor water goes through a water softener which replaces
the calcium with a sodium salt. While they are inside, all my
plants get watered with softened tap water. I use tepid water
because the cold water that comes from our faucets is really cold.
The softened water does not seem to harm any of my plants. While
inside the pots will need to be placed on a saucer to protect
the floor. But do not attach the saucer to the pot.
Outside, all the container plants get watered daily either
from rain showers or the hard unsoftened city water directly from
the garden hose. If the the soil is moist one inch down from
the surface, do not give the plant any water. Because of the
copolymer crystals, on cool days plants may not need to be watered.
In August, the roots have usually filled the pots, so in the evening
after a day in the 90's or more, I check the soil in the containers
to see if they need more water.
On hot, dry, sunny days, I will take the garden hose and mist
the plants and the deck, so that the evaporation of the water
will help cool the plants. I will do this in the hot mid-day
sun if they look like they need it. Contrary to some people's
beliefs, the drops of water on the plants will not leave little
magnification burn marks on them. Don't you feel cooler after
getting sprayed by a sprinkler?
My fertilizer of choice is Ra·pid·Gro Bloom
Builder (19-24-18 with micro nutrients). I've tried other
formulas with the soilless mix, but so far, prefer this one. I
like the foliage, blooms and good tuber production I get with
this formula. The plants get fed every 7-10 days. I mix the fertilizer
and water in a watering can and pour it into the individual containers
until the liquid runs out of the bottoms. I stop feeding the plants
at the end of August, because we usually get our first killing
frost in the first weeks of September.
I spray the combination fungicide and pesticide, Orthene
III, in the early evening (if the air is still and cool)
at the first sign of powdery mildew, spider mites, or thrips.
The first time I used it, I thought that I would wake up the next
morning to find that all the plants' leaves were burned or the
plants dead. Instead, the plants looked happy and healthy!
The plants get hardened off to the outside weather conditions
when the nighttime temperatures rise into the high 40's F, usually
in the first weeks of May. The containers are set on the southeast
facing deck under the front porch stairs. At night I cover the
plants with a reemay fabric blanket and/or a giant piece of bubble
wrap which are both made for covering vegetable gardens. All the
pots get taken back inside if there is a frost warning. The first
week of June, the sun loving plants get hauled upstairs to the
top deck.
Until the end of August, I add more potting soil to
the container when the soil level looks like it has dropped,
exposing the roots. When the lower leaves start dying, I cut them
off. In August, outer green leaves get thinned out to allow the
inner branches to receive light so they can grow and make more
flowers.
Some dahlias are affected by sudden drops in temperature(within
20 minutes) from the 80's into the 50's(F) due to a thunderstorm
(with rain or hail) or by an electrical storm (lightning
and thunder only). These situations seem to trigger a winter season
shut-down even though it's the middle of the summer. The leaves
droop as if the plant doesn't have enough water, even though a
check of the soil proves that it is moist. Let the soil in
the pot dry out before watering again. Many times this will
get the plant to regenerate and start growing again and flower
nicely. Sometimes only the buds will continue to develop and bloom.
Sometimes the plant will die.
Keeping a growth record of each dahlia and taking a photograph
of the plant and flower is a good idea for future year's reference.
Besides the usual classification data such as bloom type, color
and size, I include pot size, height, first bloom date, supplier,
and how well it did. I also write a summary on what the season's
growing conditions were like, so that I can see why a plant may
not have done very well that summer or did exceptionally well.
The best thing about container gardening is that the plants
can be moved! The ones in flower can be turned around or moved
to the front for the best flower show, the ones growing too tall
go to the back, or the sun stressed ones can be moved to a shadier
location. When there's a hailstorm warning or dark thunderstorm
clouds are seen moving in our direction, I move the plants next
to the house, under the eaves, until the storm passes or until
the next morning. In early September, when there is an early frost
or snowfall warning, and we are home, my husband and I make a
mad dash out and bring inside the dahlias which are in full bloom
or have a lot of promising buds on them. After that first frigid
spell, the temperatures usually warm up again; the plants go outside
and give us another month of beautiful dahlia flowers.
This way of growing container dahlias is not written in stone.
This is a starting point to help develop your own system of growing
contained dahlias. I saw some very nicely grown container plants
when I was at the ADS National Show in Kalispell, Montana, so
if you have found a method which works for your dahlias, by all
means continue to use it!
This article was originally published in the Bulletin of the
American Dahlia Society;
Author's update: If
you are growing potted dahlias on a cement patio, put the container
in the shade during the hottestest part of the day or the
plant could get too hot and burn from the reflected heat of the
cement. Morning sun is the best, especially, if you live in a
hot summer area.
Check the label of ingredients on the potting mix. Some of today's
mixes already have the copolymer crystals added to the mix. If
so, do not add any of the crystals to the pot.
Some mixes already have fertilizer added to the mix. While the
roots are filling the pot, you do not need to add any more fertilizer,
but once the plant starts really growing, it consumes fertilizer
rapidly, so you will need to give it additional plant food.
Schultz brand potting mix with fertilizer for Roses is a nice
potting mix for dahlias. If you have an Eagle Hardware Store,
they have a Cole's brand planting mix which grows dahlias well,
too. I do not recommend Peter's brand potting mix for dahlias,
because it has too much water retaining peat moss and a wetting
agent which keeps the soil too wet for the tubers.
PHOTOGRAPHS

PHOTO NO. 1: The potting mix just covered the dahlia tuber when
it was placed on the bottom 1/3 mixture of soil and copolymer
slurry. The eye of the root was left exposed. The plant has grown
beyond the top of the pot and has been staked, so it is ready
to be completely filled in with potting soil. The lower leaves
will be covered with soil.
(© Barbara Jenke)

PHOTO NO 2: The staked dahlia's pot has been filled in with potting
mix. The top growing tip has been pinched off. The leaves below
the soil line were covered over with the mix. The plant is ready
to be tied to the stake and then watered.
(© Barbara Jenke)
Hot Springs is located in the southern Black Hills of South Dakota in the southwestern part of the state, and has an altitude of 3800 ft above sea level. Please refer to Barbara's Letter to the Editor in the June, 1993, issue of the ADS The Bulletin. Photos of the deck gardens appear in that issue and the September, 1994, bulletin.