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Polk County Master Gardeners
News Articles
Reblooming Iris

I can remember my father saying, “Better to be lucky than good.” I’m not sure I really buy that, but now and then being lucky certainly helps.

The year before we left Dallas for Mena, we went to an Iris sale and bought six or eight plants. In the process of digging them up and moving them to Mena, we lost track of which plant was which. To add to the woes of the poor Iris, we stuck them in the sole sunny spot in our yard. It just happened to be more of a rock garden than a home designed to make Iris happy. But an Iris is a survivor. When we finally got some raised beds in place with good soil in them, we moved all the Iris to one of the new beds.

This spring we were delighted to see the plants flourishing and lots of wonderful blooms. Came the summer, the blooms faded, and I made a mental note to dig and divide them in a couple of years and promptly forgot the Iris.

A couple of weeks ago I noticed that suddenly the Iris bed had even more blooms than in the spring. Turns out that some of our “mystery” purchases were reblooming Iris. They flower in the spring and then again in late summer or fall.

Reblooming Iris needs about the same treatment as any bearded Iris: neutral pH soil, good drainage, plenty of organic material in the soil, and at least 6 hours of sun a day. They may need a little more fertilizer than the traditional, single-bloom period Iris. But that fertilizer should be high in phosphorus (the middle number), NOT nitrogen (the first number). Too much nitrogen will give you vigorous plants with little or no blooms.

Be careful not to over-water. Usually, normal rainfall is all that Iris will require after they are past the initial transplant stage.

Be sure to plant Iris at least six to eight weeks before the onset of winter. This gives them a chance to develop a root system before they have to contend with really cold weather.

You will need to dig up and divide the Iris every three or four years. Keep the white rhizomes with green leaves and discard the rest. Trim the roots to about two inches and the leaves to about six inches. You should replant them within two to three weeks. A good way to remember which plant is which is to write the name or color on the back of the fan of leaves with a felt marker pen. Keep them in a box or paper sack (not plastic) in a cool, dry place - but not in the refrigerator. Plant them 8 to 18 inches apart (depending on how tall the variety will get) so that they will have room to multiply.

Polk County Master Gardeners has a new web address: http://www.uaex.edu/polk/MG/. You will find lots of information there about gardening in southwestern Arkansas.

 

By Barbara M. Tobias

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University of Arkansas
Division of Agriculture
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Last Date Modified 05/15/2006
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Polk County
Cooperative Extension Service
211 DeQueen Street
Mena, AR  71953
Phone (479) 394-6018 • Fax (479) 394-8137

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