blown_dry Bessie I'm in love, with the glowing pastel apricot color and softly wavy petals. Growing flowers that make you happy can be a goal. An open center is not counter to that. You can just pursue personal joy. I wonder what could be done to make space for this and also for people who are breeding for cut or for show-worthy form and are looking for informed critique? When a person is growing for personal joy, that person is the only meaningful authority on that project. Maybe a "Seedling Pictures Just To Share" category?
Bessie blown_dry thank you for sharing your incredible wisdom. I'm not in a race, and although I may have goals I'd like to achieve, I ultimately want to have a joyful experience☺.
Bessie Culled nine 2023 seedling plants today, mostly for very open centers and a few for weak or wobbly stems.These seedlings below have flowers at mature stages so I thought it was worth sharing the later stage of bloom for these. Four open blooms. Three open blooms. Currently only one open bloom. Seed parent updated name is Hollyhill Creamy.
Teddahlia We are still planting some of the first year seedlings and I just inspected the seedling plants and they need a few more days to be big enough to plant. I have about 100 tubers from third year seedlings to plant but all the tubers from the 2022 seedlings are planted. New breeders have only one year's crop to grow and evaluate and we have seedlings from 2020 through 2023. I planted some rooted cuttings of this one yesterday and have several tubers of it to plant yet. I like pink flowers. This one is a good tuber maker and grows vigorously.
Bessie Teddahlia i like the way your photo contains different stages of the bloom. That's not easy to capture.
Teddahlia My Margaret always complains that I do not take enough pictures but that really means I do not take enough pictures of the ones she likes. In my brain, this is just a group shot and they are useful to show the plant looks nice. Using the cell phone for pictures is rather new to me. I need to take more short video clips and say a couple of words about the flowers. Historically, not naming the pictures has always been the biggest challenge. We have lots of pictures of nice flowers but no idea what they are. I am only about 95% certain about this one as the pictures were not labeled. I asked Margaret if she recognized this 2022 seedling picture. It is about 8 inches in diameter. She said she has no idea what it is. I vaguely remember it as it was so extreme in the length of the cactus florets.
Bessie I find it fascinating that some of the dahlias close up, or "cup" in the late afternoon. These are the latest bloomers. Seed parent of this yellow one is Hollyhill Creamy which is an unreleased variety at the time of this writing.
Bessie A few more seedlings have mature blooms. I'm hoping 23066 closes up a bit more as a mature bloom. Didn't show it's center immediately. Hollyhill Creamy is the seed parent. 23004 has Alloway Candy seed parent. Bloom is slow to unfurl. Looks like sun exposure will affect the bloom color.
Teddahlia Hollyhill Cream? I checked our variety list and that one is missing. I wonder if it is HH Buttermilk that had preliminary name that may have been something like cream.
Bessie Teddahlia , in an order you mistakenly sent the "wrong" tuber by accident in 2022. You said you would likely not be releasing it, and gave me permission to use the name Hollyhill Cream, and said I could give it away with proper credits to you. Do these pictures look familiar? I left out pictures of it going open center, at times.
Teddahlia Hollyhill Creamy, Seedling 17-53, almost released. One year it looks very good and not so much the next year. We have been using it for breeding and when crossed with a waterlily it makes nice seedlings. We introduced one of it's seedlings last year and now am using that one for breeding with the first batch of seedlings planted in the seedling patch. Seedling of HH Creamy that we are still growing but has an uncertain future. I have added Creamy to our list of varieties.
Bessie SteveM I have a fragrant Dahlia! I would have likely just thrown the seedling from Triple Wren seed away, but wanted to test vase life and fragrance. I can't quite place the smell... Maybe like a chrysanthemum or nasturtium or sweet alyssum. It's a familiar smell, but not sweet like roses or carnations. I'll let you know if I figure it out. Wouldn't have photographed it, except I'm guessing someone might be curious what it looks like.
Bessie Bessie this "fragrant" seedling is sitting in the throw out pile. If anyone wants some genetic material, let me know. I decided the fragrance was like yellow trumpet daffodils. Not a smell I like.
LoriDee Bessie I've grown Honka, a yellow orchid & it has a wonderful fragrance. It reminds me of a grandmas perfume 😂🌼
calico20hill Is the fragrance coming from the flower or from the foliage? I have noticed an almost dill-like scent to the foliage and the old Karma Choc dahlia to me has a faint smell of bitter chocolate. That is as close as I have come to identifying a scent.
Bessie calico20hill the scent is definitely coming from the flower. The smell reminds me of a florist walk-in cooler. My latest thought is it smells similar to the trumpet yellow daffodil varieties I grow. However, it is not like some of the super fragrant narcissus. I don't think I will keep it for the fragrance.
Cosey You all are going to make me sniff all my open seedlings this year. Truthfully I don't smell my dahlias because ... no scent. But now I am curious. The only way scent will start to accumulate in dahlias is by seeking out the unique specimens that have some scent, no matter what the plant or bloom looks like. I hope a few of you that might have found something get together and trade plants and start some generational seedling trials.
Teddahlia Several years, ago I was sure one of the seedlings had a faint scent and the next year it did not. The ones I have smelled over the years had a very weak scent that was hardly worth the effort(Hy Scent). I hope when someone actually increases the scent, it is a nice scent. I quickly got tired of smelling the flowers by the way, I have other things to do especially when there was nothing to smell.
Bessie 23015, Alloway Candy seed parent 23058, Hollyhill Donnatella seed parent 23061, Hollyhill Creamy seed parent Updated picture for 23029, Alloway Candy seed parent
Bessie These two seedlings have very delicate coloring. 23038 Alloway Candy sp 23042 is probably the most beautiful coloring of all my seedlings that have bloomed for 2023, thus far. Strong tall plant.
SteveM Bessie Great job, you have quite a collection of keepers for next year! How many do you think you will end up keeping over for a second year?