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Conundrum on Coleus

The ColorBlaze Wicked Hot coleus is used as a backdrop for colorful butterfl ies feeding on Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana.

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Photos courtesy of Norman Winter/TNS

left: This Ruby-throated Hummingbird found the ColorBlaze Wicked Hot coleus to be just perfect. center: The blooms of the ColorBaze Wicked Hot coleus if left on the plant will attract bees, butterfl ies and hummingbirds. right: The ColorBlaze Wicked Hot coleus is used as a backdrop for colorful butterfl ies feeding on Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana.

By Norman Winter

As if 2020 couldn’t get more challenging, I have now run head on into a conundrum on coleus or to put it more succinctly a perplexity on pinching. First a little jaunt into my history with coleus.

I have been part of trials involving coleus for about 25 years starting back when I was in the Texas A&M system as Tarrant County extension horticulturist in Fort Worth. At the time we were evaluating coleus for their sun tolerance. In all the years, we were also keeping a close watchful eye on when they bloomed. We wanted foliage, not blooms, and I suppose that holds true today.

Our grandparents grew coleus that was seed produced and therefore by its nature, there was pretty foliage, not all that much sun tolerance and its life ended abruptly with fl owers followed by seed. Once the breeders got to work and coupled with innovative vegetative propagation our coleus world exploded. We now have coleus that have become true landscape assets lasting the entire growing season. I am sitting in Columbus, Georgia, in early November and still shooting photos of ColorBlaze Wicked Hot and ColorBlaze Lime Time.

All coleuses will eventually bloom; it just doesn’t mean the end of its life now. As horticulturists we teach gardeners to simply pinch the blooms off once they start to occur. This will keep those gorgeous leaves coming. This year I told my bride Jan that I was going to leave a few fl owers on one clump of my ColorBlaze Wicked Hot that started sending up a few blue blooms in late September. They are pretty spikes of blooms but also what you may have never known or considered, is that they are members of the Lamiaceae or Mint family just like salvias. You can see where I am headed.

In early October my ruby-throated hummingbirds started making the ColorBlaze Wicked Hot part of the daily meal plan. These hummingbirds fattening up for the long trip to the tropics and fl ying 23 hours across the Gulf of Mexico needed all-of the nourishment they could get. They were also hitting on the Luscious lantanas, Rockin salvias, Vermillion cuphea, and Mexican sunfl owers.

Color Blaze Wicked Hot made its debut this year and I found myself asking did we need another orange coleus? After all the ColorBlaze series by Proven Winners already had Sedona Sunset, which is so incredibly wonderful and if you have ever been to Sedona, Arizona you’ll agree it is perfectly named.

ColorBlaze Wicked Hot is different with its serrated margins and it excels in sun or shade. It can reach 40 inches in height with a spread to about 36 inches. In other words, it is vigorous but don’t let that scare you, it is easily pinched to maintain your desired shape. What I love about it is that it reminds me of glowing embers in a campfi re.

At The Garden Guy’s house, I have used it in a lot of partnerships. It is incredible with Illusion Emerald Lace ornamental sweet potatoes and with Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana where the coleus foliage creates a picturesque backdrop for beautiful feeding butterfl ies. But the coleus conundrum or pinching perplexity now exists. I showed my photos to some greenhouse producers asking the question, do coleus blooms have a place in the landscape. The answer from the East Coast was they do now. It was a similar response from coastal Louisiana.

There will be 15 selections to choose from in the ColorBlaze series in 2021 including the new ColorBlaze Royale Pineapple which is chartreuse with hints of burgundy and bronze. I promise there will be at least one to fi t your needs. But they come with a warning, you may be tempted to leave a few blooms if, and when they show. If you do, the hummingbirds, bees and butterfl ies will thank you!

Norman Winter, horticulturist, garden speaker and author of, “Tough-as-Nails Flowers for the South” and “Captivating Combinations: Color and Style in the Garden.” Follow him on Facebook @NormanWinterTheGardenGuy.

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