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On Gardening: Tiara Pink a jewel of a Supertunia

Norman Winter, Tribune News Service on

Published in Gardening News

One of the plants that literally took your breath away at the plant trials this year was the new Supertunia Tiara Pink. Shoot, I am not even a pink flower guy in the least but this one had me mesmerized. Subsequently the ones made available to me in testing have been the same, a "Holy wow!"

I’ve recently posted a photo on my Facebook page and it quickly brought in the accolades and comments. More than one comment came from gardeners who were already growing it despite it not making its debut until 2025. I suppose that it was a soft release.

Supertunia Tiara Pink will reach about 12 inches tall with a 24-inch spread. I am watching not only my personal plants but some I slipped into VIP and high visibility targets. I am thinking we may get more spread in the South, but regardless this will be on the must-have list next spring. It is the color blends that make this flower so incredible.

Proven Winners calls the color Princess Pink with a white center. I suppose that is true, but I see a much richer pink around the white. Its funny even on the Proven Winners site, their photos look a little subdued compared to what I have seen. But this may be one of those plants that give you a variance in color depending on the amount of sun, time of day and cloud cover.

I would be remiss if I didn’t tell you there is also a Supertunia Tiara Blue but that will be the subject of a later column. I had Facebook followers ask if it would partner well with Supertunia Vista Bubblegum and I suppose it would, but to me that would be a waste since Bubblegum is so vigorous.

Supertunia Tiara Pink deserves to be grown with a blue like Supertunia Mini Vista Indigo petunia or Superbells Grape Punch calibrachoa. Go ahead and say those are purple.

Son James and the Eden Estate Management team used it at a street side bed around a mailbox and partnered it with various Luscious Royale lantanas. To me it was pushing the envelope, but I also have to admit it was stunning. I suspect one of the future hallmark combos will be Supertunia Tiara Pink with a new scaevola also showing up next year called Stardiva Blue.

Supertunia Tiara Pink will need fertile well-drained soil. I already mentioned my son planted some in a raised curbside bed but containers and baskets with a really good potting soil are "easy peasy." This year has been like none other with intense heat and virtually no rain. I have had to water containers twice a day several times.

 

Fertilization plays a key role with Supertunias, even more so when watered twice a day. I use a water-soluble mix and pour from a watering can with a spout. That is my method and occurs every 2 to 3 weeks in the morning before the Mrs. has breakfast. Cutting back by a third has been vital in the South this year on Supertunias, Superbells and Superbenas. I know it is my imagination, but the plants almost seem to say thanks.

Next year will be amazing for gardeners with new plant introductions. Maybe we all needed a tough year to hone our gardening skills. So get ready and bush up on your photography skills too, you will really need them next year.

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(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.)

(NOTE TO EDITORS: Norman Winter receives complimentary plants to review from the companies he covers.)


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