Blanket Flower Arizona Sun
Gaillardia x grandiflora Arizona Sun

Winner of a 2005 All-America Selection AND Europe's highest
honor, the Fleuroselect Gold Medal!
Begins the Bloom Season A MONTH
EARLY!
A huge breeding breakthrough for
Blanket Flowers!
2005 All-America Selection
2005 Fleuroselect Gold Medal
This is such an exciting breeding breakthrough for the
Blanket Flower family that I hardly know where to begin
explaining it! Until now, Blanket Flowers have needed a "vernalization"
period to flower -- that is, they had to go through winter
temperatures in order to begin the flowering process. Well,
Arizona Sun NEEDS NO VERNALIZATION. What this means for us as
gardeners is that this plant blooms much, much earlier than
other varieties (up to a month!), flowers very heavily even the
first year, and sets masses and masses of blooms. As "side
benefits," it's also uniform in size and leaf structure. You
just won't believe the flower power of Arizona Sun until you see
it blooming -- and blooming, and blooming! -- in your garden!
The flowers are large, many-petaled, and lovely. Expect them
to reach 4 inches wide and to crowd one another for space on
compact plants 12 inches high and 10 inches wide. They begin
blooming with the first warm weather of summer and won't quit
until nipped by fall frost! NO wonder Arizona Sun has received
top honors on both sides of the Atlantic!
The plant size is uniform, too, which is great for large
plantings. And if you've grown other Blanket Flowers from seed,
such as
Goblin, you'll be impressed by the way Arizona Sun's foliage
looks identical from plant to plant. One of the odd things about
Blanket Flowers is that the leaf shape sometimes varies greatly,
so that when a large planting is out of bloom, it looks as
though it's got 5 or 6 different species instead of just one
variety! (We sometimes get calls from folks who have sown their
Goblin seeds and come up with wildly different looking plants.
Once they bloom they all look alike, but when they're just
leaves, you can really spot the differences in foliage shape and
texture!) Arizona Sun looks identical from plant to plant,
making it suitable even for formal plantings.
Hardy from one end of the country to the other (zones 3-10),
this native perennial is happy in any sun-soaked spot. It puts
up with heat, humidity, cold, poor soil, and -- once it has
built up a good root system in your garden -- drought. The
flowers are lovely for cutting, and they make nice garden
companions to other sun-loving natives, such as
Coreopsis,
Echinacea, and
Yarrow.
Starting Arizona Sun from seed is easy. Sow indoors or out,
germinating at 70 to 75 degrees F and leaving the seeds
uncovered. They will sprout within 5 to 10 days, and (if begun
indoors) can be transplanted anytime after the seedlings have 2
sets of true leaves. (The first "leaves," actually cotyledons,
will shrivel and fall off when the seedling is young.) Arizona
Sun will begin blooming 12 to 15 weeks after sowing --
unheard-of for a Blanket Flower and pretty darned quick for any
perennial! Zones 3-10. |