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Fireball poppy is rare, desirable cultivar

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  • Fireball poppy is rare, desirable cultivar

    Tulsa World, Oklahoma
    June 8 2013


    Russell Studebaker: Fireball poppy is rare, desirable cultivar

    By RUSSELL STUDEBAKER In Our Gardens on Jun 8, 2013, at 2:26 AM
    Updated on 6/08/13 at 5:43 AM

    Starting from Mexico in 1541, the Spanish conquistador Francisco
    Coronado searched in vain for the fabled cities of gold in the plains
    of Texas and Kansas. A few centuries later, and not far from Wichita,
    I discovered a plant that is almost as rare as Coronado's gold, at
    least in the nursery trade.

    One spring in the '70s while traveling through the little town of
    Winfield, Kan., I saw a traffic island where magnificent double orange
    poppies grew. Those poppies were as desirable to me as the gold
    Coronado sought.

    Wanting to expand the species range, I "borrowed" a small piece. And
    through the years, I rarely saw this poppy in gardens, except in the
    Victorian cottage gardens in Eureka Springs, Ark. It grew differently
    than the Oriental poppies as it was prone to increase by underground
    stolons.

    Emulating Coronado's extensive quest, I determined to learn its name.
    So I made color copies of the plant in flower and wrote its
    description. Like a rap sheet for a wanted person, I mailed these to
    several horticultural experts who might know. All answered that they
    were unfamiliar with the plant.

    But finally the true identity came with a letter from the late Fred
    McGourty, owner of Hillside Gardens, a perennial nursery in Norfolk,
    Conn., and the former editor of the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens
    handbooks.

    He wrote that, "there were not many cultivars of poppies with double
    flowers and this one appeared to match the Armenian poppy, Papiver
    lateritum "Flore Pleno," and it was a (pass-along) plant in rural
    areas."

    Then in Christopher Grey-Wilson's definitive book, "Poppies," he
    reports that the Armenian poppy is native to the mountains of Turkish
    Armenia (Lazistan) where it inhabits rocky places, cliff crevices and
    screes at high altitudes. Perhaps that is why it seems to thrive so
    well in the rocky soils and high altitude of the Ozarks.

    He says that "it appears that the status of the cultivar Flore Pleno,
    also known as Fireball, is unclear, but thinking would have it in a
    form of the Armenian poppy or at least to have that species in its
    parentage. But in literature, it is often classed as a form of the
    Oriental poppy, and though that is clearly wrong."

    This perennial poppy only grows 8 to 12 inches tall with its double
    orange flowers almost 3 inches in diameter. It seldom stays where it
    is planted and wanders, popping up elsewhere in the garden.

    Gray-Wilson says that there are two forms of Fireball in cultivation,
    one with larger flowers and more robust than the other. With the
    flower's color, it is probably best used with gray or silver foliage
    plants and is a plant for the front of the border.

    Those that I have seen in Arkansas seem to grow in more clumps than
    mine. This poppy is long lived in the garden, despite its roving
    nature, and desires a fertile, well-drained soil in full sun or part
    shade. And like Oriental poppies, they go completely dormant in the
    summer and do not want any water and don't emerge again until cooler
    weather in fall or early spring. Propagation is by division or
    separation of the runners in spring.

    Sources: From gardeners who grow it, and mail: High Country Gardens,
    Santa Fe, N.M.; 1-800-925-9387; tulsaworld.com/highcountry

    Now I am 99.9 percent sure that with the description and photo that
    this nursery portrays of this plant it is the Armenian poppy Fireball.
    High Country lists it as "heirloom hybrid" poppy as Papaver
    intermedium (Double orange hybrid Oriental poppy).

    There are wonderful old plants to rediscover in communities and
    cottage gardens that are well worth learning their name and their
    history.

    Garden event: The Cacti & Succulent Society of Tulsa will hold a show
    and sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Tulsa Garden
    Center, 2435 S. Peoria Ave.

    http://www.tulsaworld.com/article.aspx/Fireball_poppy_is_rare_desirable_cultivar/20130608_44_D6_CUTLIN245012



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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