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Cool Wave pansy a hot new choice for fall

By Nancy Brachey
Nancy Brachey
Nancy Brachey writes about gardening for The Charlotte Observer's weekly Home & Garden section.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/10/04/11/58/LnTf4.Em.138.jpeg|475
    - The Wave Family
    The low, spreading habit of Cool Wave pansies are perfect for hanging baskets. This one is named Frost.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/10/04/11/58/U0mmZ.Em.138.jpeg|177
    - The Wave Family
    Ornamental kale and White pansies make a nice look for late autumn and winter.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/10/04/11/58/smkEO.Em.138.jpeg|177
    - The Wave Family
    A taller perennial and mums add dimension to a pot of Cool Wave pansies named Violet Wing.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/10/04/11/58/jpNzB.Em.138.jpeg|475
    - The Wave Family
    A seasonal display of pansies aptly named White placed in an orange pumpkin.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/10/04/11/58/psfX7.Em.138.jpeg|475
    - The Wave Family
    A fall look combines orange an d violet pansies.

More Information

  • Ask Nancy

    Q. I moved a boxwood from the edge of a flower bed to the center late in the spring. It showed browning on the west side right away. I watched it through the summer and it slowly turned brown. I soaked it each week, but new sun exposure seemed to wreak havoc. I cut limbs back by one-third looking, to see if there was any green showing in the limbs. There is, but can I cut it back more to get rid of the ugliness for winter? I don’t want to kill it.The timing of moving that boxwood is the cause of the problem. The roots did not have time to recover and support the top growth before heat hit. Last fall would have been much better because the roots would regenerate through the winter and spring. I suggest you wait and see how it develops this fall and next spring. It may recover or it may not. However, it will take a long time to recover the lovely boxwood shape it once possessed. Do some gentle trimming of the brown areas, but don’t cut stems that are still green.


We’re beginning to see signs of autumn.

So while many of summer’s bedding plants – begonias, impatiens, vinca and more – still look pretty good, it’s time to give your landscape a new look.

Pansies will do that for autumn, and keep the show going through the winter and spring. That is a lot of bloom for your buck, and the range of choice is huge, ranging from whites and softest pastels to vivid reds, blues purples and even black. The flowers can be quite small, as in the pretty violas, or large splashes of color, often with attractive markings.

This fall, a new series of pansies called Cool Wave enters the nationwide marketplace, in both independent garden centers and big-box retailers.

The name stems from its growth habit which is somewhat flat and spreading. This habit makes it well suited for a hanging basket, where it should spread about 30 inches, spilling over the sides of a container and even planted in a mass as a ground cover, with each plant spreading up to 2 feet, according to the breeder, Pan American Seed Co.

While gardeners in the Piedmont have long expected fall pansies to last through the winter, the Cool Waves showed remarkable tolerance to winters much farther north. In the South, they tend to bloom though normal winter weather, pausing for a time should the temperature drop below freezing for a long stretch.

Cool Waves and most other pansies sold for fall planting in the Piedmont benefit from winter sun and regular fertilizer to keep the plants growing and blooming. A shady spot is less likely to produce the maximum amount of bloom through the winter.

Pansies make ideal choices for containers, and there is a double reward if you plant spring flowering bulbs such as tulips or daffodils into the pots before topping them with pansies.

It may seem like a long wait for the bulbs to bloom if the top of the pot is a layer of pine needles or bare soil. But adding the pansies after you plant the bulbs can make a lovely centerpiece for your steps, deck or patio. The slender stems of the tulips or daffodils will rise easily among the pansy plants.

Making this combination will also give you the chance to combine favorite colors, such as red tulips and white pansies, or yellow daffodils and orange pansies. Another great combination is to cover stretches of bulbs in you flower bed with a ground cover of pansies.

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