A growing love of dahlias
BBC Gardeners World|September 2023
Monty shares why he can't imagine Longmeadow without dahlias and reveals how to get the best plants out of these long-flowering
Monty
A growing love of dahlias

Bishop of Llandaff' has a lot to answer for. Not so long ago, dahlias were as de rigueur as plastic gnomes and not half as ironic. They were untrendy, unfashionable and, more often than not, simply ghastly. Then along came the Bishop, with his rich alizarin robes and brilliant chrome-yellow centre. He quickly became popular among the very people who hated dahlias, setting a thoroughly bad example. Then before you could say 'Arabian Night' or 'Grenadier', dahlias started popping up all over gardens that had hitherto known better - and we had all come to just adore them.

Well, almost... not the nasty vulgar sort, of course, the dahlias that looked like a deliciously brash wedding hat, sitting over a raucous laugh, with a fag in one hand, and a gin and orange in the other. Not the dahlias that were grown with a quiet fanaticism on allotments across the country and then displayed singly, like floral haiku, in canvas marquees at lateseason flower shows across the land. And not dahlias in the wrong place and not dahlias getting uppity in the border. But the right sort of dahlias - like the right sort of people, really - were such fun!

Big and bold

I grew up with dahlias. They are part of the flora of my strange childhood. My mother grew the big, cactus-flowered dahlias, all lipstick pinks, brassy yellows and shouty reds. They had their own bed next to the veg and were relegated - in a kind of apartheid, along with gladioli - to a cutting garden. Here, the soil was bare and every plant was supported by a stout square stake, of a kind we used for nothing else in the garden and that lived bundled at the back of the shed for most of the year.

This story is from the September 2023 edition of BBC Gardeners World.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the September 2023 edition of BBC Gardeners World.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM BBC GARDENERS WORLDView All
Your wildlife month
BBC Gardeners World

Your wildlife month

December is a time for reflection in the garden. What worked for wildlife in 2023 and what didn't? How could you do more? Looking at the bones of the garden now, is there space for more plants? Are your fences bare? Are there enough berries and hips? You have until March to plant bare-root trees and shrubs. What would look good? What would better serve wildlife?

time-read
1 min  |
December 2023
The Full Monty
BBC Gardeners World

The Full Monty

I can, and occasionally do, manufacture jobs in a kind of gung-ho, boy-scout spirit

time-read
3 mins  |
December 2023
Hardwood cuttings
BBC Gardeners World

Hardwood cuttings

It's the zero-fuss way to make free new shrubs - just follow our guide from Nick Bailey

time-read
3 mins  |
December 2023
'It's like another lung - like having oxygen on tap. It makes you breathe in a different way'
BBC Gardeners World

'It's like another lung - like having oxygen on tap. It makes you breathe in a different way'

Helen Maxwell's garden in rural Carmarthenshire surrounds the house that her husband (who's an architect) designed.

time-read
4 mins  |
December 2023
Tales from Titchmarsh
BBC Gardeners World

Tales from Titchmarsh

Sunday is a day for enjoying the garden in peace and quiet, says Alan, without the buzz, hum and drone of power tools

time-read
3 mins  |
October 2023
YOUR PRUNING MONTH
BBC Gardeners World

YOUR PRUNING MONTH

Frances Tophill shows you how to get greenery in shape ahead of the colder winter months

time-read
3 mins  |
October 2023
Winter greenhouse bounty Plant up winter veg
BBC Gardeners World

Winter greenhouse bounty Plant up winter veg

Keep your greenhouse fully stocked up with tasty salads and veg. In the second of our three-part series, Lucy Chamberlain reveals the crops to grow now

time-read
3 mins  |
October 2023
Tender plants
BBC Gardeners World

Tender plants

A cold snap can wreak havoc in the garden if you don't protect frost-tender and borderline-hardy plants. Alan Titchmarsh explains how to do it

time-read
6 mins  |
October 2023
YOUR PRUNING MONTH
BBC Gardeners World

YOUR PRUNING MONTH

Keep summer-fruiting raspberries productive and healthy with Frances Tophill's guide

time-read
3 mins  |
September 2023
Dividing your plants
BBC Gardeners World

Dividing your plants

Split big clumps into vigorous new plants with Nick Bailey's essential guide

time-read
2 mins  |
September 2023