NO PLACE LIKE HOME -- karen wight
Sweet peas are one of Mother Nature’s best creations. They are easy to
grow, look fabulous in the garden, provide bundles and bundles of
intoxicating flowers and self-seed almost to a fault.
I started my sweet pea fascination years ago, and since then I have
fine-tuned the process so I get maximum results with minimum effort. Let
me walk you through the process so you and your family can revel in these
early spring miracles.
Pick a spot in your garden that has full sun, moist soil and room enough
for a trellis, bamboo tepee or wire structure. If you need to amend the
soil, do it now. Any effort at this stage will reap exponential benefits.
Sweet peas’ tendrils need something to cling to, so depending on your
style, select a method of support.
If you are growing your sweet peas against a fence or wall, provide
netting for the tendrils to grab. This will give you a dramatic plane of
green leaves, reaching tendrils and beautiful flowers. If you choose a
location in the middle of your garden, you will need a free-standing
structure.
There are many ways to provide support. One of my favorites is a bamboo
tepee. I use three bamboo poles, approximately 4 feet tall, and secure
the top together with raffia or jute. I dig three holes in a triangular
pattern and plant the bamboo ends in the dirt. At this point I wrap the
poles with nylon netting so the young plants will find a spot to grab.
Metal wire frames such as obelisks, cones or triangles are other lovely
ways to give your plants the support they need to give you maximum
results. The plants climb upward toward the sun, and stems, leaves and
tendrils just seem to grow before your very eyes.
Next, the seeds. Most of mine are cultivated from last year’s harvest,
but I add at least one packet of new seeds a year to my mix. Sometimes my
experiments lead to new generations of favorites, sometimes not. Last
year I tried some heirloom varieties. Seeds are called “heirloom” when
they have been around for several generations. A few of these are
charming and fragrant, but I have found the best performers to be the
improved strains that are disease-resistant, vigorous and produce
bountiful flowers on long, sturdy stems.
Sweet peas come in a huge array of colors. Color mixtures include deep
rose, blue, purple, scarlet, lavender, white, cream, amethyst on white
ground, salmon, salmon pink on cream, and red. This is not the time for
color coordination; plant a variety of seed types and colors to find
which varieties grow best in your location and soil. Soak your seeds in
water for 24 hours before planting. This will help with seed germination.
Sow seeds 1 inch deep, 1 to 2 inches apart at the base of your support
structure. Water well and fertilize. It might sound cliche, but using
Miracle Gro once a week will help produce a breathtaking display of
flowers.
Once your sweet peas start flowering, cut, cut, cut. Sweet peas are
prolific; the more you cut, the more flowers your plants will produce. As
you cut your flowers, arrange them in a bouquet style, tallest in the
center and shorter toward the outside. Think of a traditional bridal
bouquet and place the flowers accordingly. Before you place them in a
vase, cut the ends of the stems straight across, then place them in a
container.
And speaking of containers, sweet peas look good in any small vase. If
you have small vases with narrow necks, this is the time to pull them off
the shelf and fill as many as you can find. The only problem with sweet
peas is that you might run out of things to put them in or places to put
them. A few sweet peas brighten a room and add a wonderful fragrance that
lasts for days.
When you have filled all of your bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchen and living
room, give a bouquet to your children’s teachers, your neighbors and your
co-workers. These flowers were meant for random acts of kindness. The
clean, sweet fragrance is one of the best parts of spring.
It’s one of Mother Nature’s loveliest miracles.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident who owned Wight House Design
for 10 years. Her column runs Saturdays.
Photo A: Sweet Peas come in almost every floral color imaginable. Choose
a wide variety for a showy display.
Photo B: Young plants need supports for the tendrils to cling to. This
wire form is simple yet gets the job done.
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