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2003: The
Year of the Poppy |
The National Garden Bureau Celebrates 2003 as
the Year of the Poppy
Poppies deserve a place in any garden: in
wildflower and meadow plantings, perennial borders, cutting gardens or mixed-shrub
borders. Their flower colors range from vibrant to subdued-from deepest crimson, bright
orange and yellow to soft pink, dusky peach, rose, lilac and cream. Flowers may be single,
double or semidouble, with amazing texture and size. The Iceland poppy produces flowers up
to seven inches across above attractive blue-green, segmented foliage. The Shirley poppy
bears single or double crepe-paper-like blooms edged with white. Field, or Flanders,
poppies sport single, crimson flowers, which suit wildflower plantings perfectly. The
National Garden Bureau designates 2003 as the 'Year of the Poppy' because it is quite
probably the most popular wildflower in America. In a border garden, poppies combine
beautifully with lamb's ears, cornflowers, larkspur, Shasta daisy, and veronica. For a
meadow look, you cannot go wrong with a sowing of poppies among lupine, coreopsis, Indian
blanket, black-eyed Susan, and cornflower-the colors complement each other and the various
plants extend the flowering season into fall. The beauty of poppy blooms is like a
magnificent sunset, somewhat fleeting. Flowers appear primarily in the spring or fall when
cool temperatures prevail. Poppies vary in height from 2 to 3 feet tall, although there
are dwarf strains of the Iceland poppy that reach only 12 inches. The latter work well in
rock gardens, in containers, and at the front edge of a border. Most poppies look good in
the middle or towards the rear of perennial beds.
What's in a Name?
Many plants in a number of genera reside in the poppy family, Papaveraceae, and
bear the name poppy: California poppy (Eschscholzia), blue poppy (Meconopsis),
plumed poppy (Macleaya) and prickly poppy (Argemone), to name four. This
fact sheet will focus on the genus Papaver, which includes most of the poppy
species. The genus Papaver contains annuals and perennials. The annual poppy, P.
rhoeas (pronounced row-ays), which gardeners have cultivated for centuries, goes by a
variety of common names, from corn or field poppy to Flanders poppy and Shirley poppy. The
"corn" of corn poppy does not, as some people assume, refer only to its habit of
showing up in cornfields. Corn is Old English for seed and from korn, the Greek
word for grain; the seed in this case refers to fields of grains like rye, wheat and oat.
Poppy seeds may lie dormant in soil for years and germinate when the soil is disturbed, as
by a plow. Flanders poppy is the single, red flower that carpeted fields in Flanders in
western Europe, noticed especially during World War I. It became famous when John McCrae,
a Canadian soldier, wrote a poem about it in 1917 commemorating the soldiers who had died:
"In Flanders Fields, the poppies grow/Between the crosses, row on row...." The
Shirley poppy also has an interesting history, which you can read about in the next
section. The Iceland poppy, P. nudaucaule (new-dih-caw-lee), a perennial, isn't
actually from Iceland but from Asia. It undoubtedly cross-pollinated in the wild and in
gardens with a few of its closely related species, including P. radicatum, which is
from Iceland. Most catalogs list the Iceland poppy as P. nudaucaule, and, no matter
what species name it goes by, it is very easy to grow from seed. It is winter-hardy from
Zones 2 to 8. Other poppies include the perennial Alpine poppy (P. alpinum and
other diminutive species), which fit beautifully in rock gardens and the perennial
Oriental poppy, P. orientale, which gardeners usually grow from root divisions not
seeds.
Historical Perspective
People have grown poppies for thousands of years, as far back as 5000 BC, when cultivated
in Mesopotamia near the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Archaelogists have found the remains
of poppies in Egyptian tombs dating back 3000 years. Myths about Greek and Roman gods
mention poppies. The Greeks thought the poppy was a favorite flower of Demeter, the
goddess of fertility and agriculture because she was said to wear a wreath of wheat and
barley interlaced with poppies. According to myth, she also used the juice of the poppy in
a concoction to cure a farmer's son when the farmer helped her in her search for her
daughter Persephone. Because Demeter was responsible for good harvests,
people believed that poppies growing around a field meant a bountiful crop, hence the
common name corn (grain) poppy. That belief held for centuries in many parts of the world,
even though the plants often proved to be a nuisance,
interfering with harvesting. Throughout Europe, Asia, and North Africa, poppies were
important medicinal plants. The flowers of the corn poppy contain rhoeadine, an alkaloid
used in mild sedatives. In The Complete Herbal, published in England in 1649,
Nicholas Culpeper mentions the use of the flowers and seeds in medicines to guard against
coughs and sore throats. The poppies grown were usually single-flowered, red, yellow or
orange with dark or white blotches at the base of the petals. In the late 1800s, the
Reverend W. Wilkes, vicar of Shirley in England, discovered a new form of the annual poppy
growing in his garden. The flower had a narrow edge of white around each petal and no
blotch. He sowed the seeds from that plant and continued to select from subsequent
generations until he had a group of poppies with single, tissue-paper-like petals, no dark
blotches at the base and colors ranging from pale pink to lilac and mauve, as well as red.
These became known as Shirley poppies. Other gardeners over the years made selections from
their plantings of Shirley poppies so that today there are double and semi-double forms
and picotee flowers with lighter or darker edges. Poppies, unlike many other perennials
and annuals, usually attain improved performance, colors and sizes
through selection, not hybridization. Some breeders in Europe and Australia produce F1
hybrids, but most companies in the United States offer open-pollinated varieties. English
breeders are working on hybrid poppies that do not set seed, thus extending the flowering
season.
Poppies at a Glance
Annuals
Corn poppy Papaver rhoeas, grows 2 to 3 feet tall, blooms from
late spring through summer and bears red, purple, lilac, white, salmon, peach, pink or
orange flowers with a distinctive dark blotch at the base of each petal. The Shirley
poppy, a selection from the species, grows to 4 feet tall; its pastel blooms lack the
blotch but have a narrow white or tinted edge on each petal.
Perennials
Alpine poppy P. alpinum, grows 5 to 10 inches tall, blooms from
late spring to summer and bears white, yellow, or occasionally orange or red flowers. It
is hardy in Zones 5 to 8.
Iceland poppy P. nudicaule, grows 1 to 2 feet tall, blooms from
late spring through summer and produces orange, red, yellow, apricot, pink, salmon or
white flowers. It is hardy in Zones 2 to 8.
Oriental poppy P. orientale, grows 2 to 4 feet tall, blooms from
late spring to midsummer and bears scarlet, salmon, pink, peach, white or rose blooms,
usually with a black blotch at the base of the petals. The foliage dies back after
flowering but begins to regrow in fall. It is hardy in Zones 4 to 9.
How to Grow from Seed
Poppies grow easily from seed. Be sure to select the correct species for an annual or
perennial planting. They are known for self-sowing, sometimes with abandon, and you may
find seedlings popping up all around the garden bed. They are not invasive and the
seedlings are easy to pull up if they land in unwanted places.
Outdoors
Poppies are frost tolerant and germinate best in cool weather and soil. Sow seeds as early
as the ground can be worked in spring. In warm areas, Zones 7 and higher, you can sow
poppies in autumn; seedlings will begin to grow early the following spring. Poppies bloom
profusely under cool growing conditions. When temperatures rise poppy plants tend to bloom
only sporadically. * Select a site in full sun, one that receives at least six hours of
direct sun daily. In warm climates (zones), plants do best with some protective shade at
midday.
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