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Gladiolus hybrid 'various'
Common Names: Sword Lily

Description:
   The gladiolus is used mainly for cut flowers, although it does have a place in the home garden. Their wide range of colors, sizes and flower types make them particularly useful for flower arrangements. Gladiolus flowers are found on exhibit at flower shows and are a specialty of many amateur growers.

Gladiolus is one of the four most popular summer-flowering bulbs. People use them either for the garden or as a cut flower in the summer months. The gladioli we know are all hybrids, and have been in culture since 1841. It is difficult to identify and count original species, but some botanists believe there are close to 300. Gladiolus is easy to hybridize, so new plants appear every year as old ones decline in popularity. A lot of the common large-flowering varieties were hybridized after 1940 in England and the Netherlands.

The butterfly-types were introduced in 1951, and over the last twenty years American hybrids have become more common.

We can classify the large-flowering gladioli into the following groups:

* Large-flowering gladiolus: This is the most important group, based on the quantities and range of varieties available. In the Netherlands several hundred varieties are cultivated in many colors and color combinations.

* Butterfly gladiolus: This group contains varieties in which the plants are not as big as the large-flowering gladioli, therefore the flowers are also a little smaller. The color of the flower is very often in strong contrast with the rest of the plant, and tends to look like a butterfly. Butterfly types are very suitable for cut flower production.

* Primulinus gladiolus: These varieties originated from the yellow Gladiolus primulinus. This group can be recognized by the upper flower leaf which covers the other flower leaves, pistil and stamen as if it were a protective little cap. The heart of the flower is, for this reason, difficult to see.

Besides the large-flowering gladioli you can find small-flowering gladioli in the following groups, all available in various colors:

* Gladiolus colvillei
* Gladiolus nanus
* Gladiolus tubergenii

The leaves of the Gladiolus are sword-shaped, hence the common name 'sword lily'.
 
Recommendations:
A corm which needs to be planted in spring when ground can be first worked and then dug up before first hard frost.

Landscape uses: borders and as a cut flower in the vegetable/cut flower garden

Attributes
 
Plant Group: Flowering Bulb
Hardiness: Zones 7 - 11
Type: Perennial
Mature Size: Height 24 - 48 inches (50 - 100 cm) x Width 5 inches (12 cm)
Flowering Period: Summer
Flowering Attributes: Any Trumpet-shaped Blossoms (3 inch flowers on 1 -2 foot stalks)
Foliage Attributes: Green Deciduous foliage.

Culture
 
Light: Full Sun Only
Soil: Sandy or Dry

Miscellaneous
 
* Propagation Methods: Division
* Provides Cut Flowers
* Attracts Butterflies
Plant URL: http://OakMediaCreations.com/myg/plants/closeup.mv?PlantID=000213





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