La Luna
La Luna is a yellow and white marble coloured dahlia. It blooms early in the season and blooms long. It’s flowers and quite sensitive to hot sunshine, and I find the petals start to burn in my full-sun dahlia patch before they are open enough to cut. This variety would be better of a half-sun garden or a cooler climate. Produces quite a few tubers and lots of blooms all blooming season long.
Flower Bloom Size - 4-5 inches
Flower Height - 3-4 feet
Flower Colour - Yellow and white
La Luna is a yellow and white marble coloured dahlia. It blooms early in the season and blooms long. It’s flowers and quite sensitive to hot sunshine, and I find the petals start to burn in my full-sun dahlia patch before they are open enough to cut. This variety would be better of a half-sun garden or a cooler climate. Produces quite a few tubers and lots of blooms all blooming season long.
Flower Bloom Size - 4-5 inches
Flower Height - 3-4 feet
Flower Colour - Yellow and white
La Luna is a yellow and white marble coloured dahlia. It blooms early in the season and blooms long. It’s flowers and quite sensitive to hot sunshine, and I find the petals start to burn in my full-sun dahlia patch before they are open enough to cut. This variety would be better of a half-sun garden or a cooler climate. Produces quite a few tubers and lots of blooms all blooming season long.
Flower Bloom Size - 4-5 inches
Flower Height - 3-4 feet
Flower Colour - Yellow and white
***NOTE***
This is a pre-order which will be shipping in April. If you need them sooner, you can contact me and we can chat
How to Plant
1.
When overnight temperatures reach 5-10C, it is time. Start by digging a hole about 3-4 inches deep
2.
Place your Dahlia Mandrew Dahlia Tuber in the hole and dump any Pete Moss in your package into the hole with it.
3.
Cover with nice and loose soil (no need to pack it down), mark what you planted and where (so you don’t forget, silly). Sit back and wait. DO NOT water until you see a plant growing out of the dirt! Dahlia Tubers have enough juice to get them started and you run the risk of rotting them out, because they have no roots growing yet to drink with.