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Monster cosmos!

(13 Posts)
PinkCosmos Wed 26-Jan-22 09:32:02

I have grown cosmos from seed for a few years. Usually 'sensation mixed'. They grow about five feet tall in my garden. This is too high for where they are so last year I tried 'dwarf sensation mixed'. They were anything but dwarf! I did grow one called 'antiquity' (or something similar). This was shorter but I wasn't keen on the colour. It was a dull pinky bronze and not as nice as it looked on the packet.

They do look lovely as the foliage is also very pretty.

This year I also heard Monty Don say to cut the tops off so that they will bush out and grow less tall. I am planning to try that next year.

Also, a couple of mine blew over in a a strong wind. Lesson learned. I will stake them next year.

Scones Sun 24-Oct-21 17:41:13

Cosmos still going strong here too. This year for the first time I didn't grow them in trays in the usual half-hardy annual way, I just scattered them on the soil. It worked a dream.

I top half of mine and leave the others. That way I get a mix and it's kind of an insurance policy as in the past I've had strong winds snap the willowy ones off.

joannapiano Sun 24-Oct-21 14:35:58

Our cosmos are still going strong. We live at the top of a hill where it can be very windy so they have to be staked regularly otherwise they lean and all the lovely pink flowers are on the earth. They have grown exceptionally tall this year.

halfpint1 Sun 24-Oct-21 13:02:56

Same here and full of flower

Sunshineandsoda Sun 24-Oct-21 12:50:17

I got a packet of cottage garden seeds early Summer. The cosmos came up about 2 months ago. They are massive with tiny buds!

JaneJudge Sun 24-Oct-21 12:48:33

Ours are extremely tall this year too. Monty Don said you should top them to keep them lower but ours are quite nice being tall and willowy. They look so pretty in a breeze smile

fairfraise Sun 24-Oct-21 12:46:09

I've grown tall cosmos most years, though not this. They do get very tall and were flowering as late as November if you just keep them staked so they don't fall over in high winds etc. If no flowers come then the feathery foliage is lovely in floral arrangements.

PamelaJ1 Sun 24-Oct-21 11:41:35

My cosmos have been glorious this year, I had to dead head daily and they are still flowering. However my morning glory started flowering this week in the midst of wind and rain ( it’s south facing) I’ve trained it to go past a window and am loving it. Better late than never.

Jaxjacky Sun 24-Oct-21 11:39:23

I grew some from seed, they to were enormous, probably just shy of yours, as it was the first time I thought that was normal, they're going over now.

Witzend Sun 24-Oct-21 11:36:16

Thank you, Poshpaws.

grandMattie Sun 24-Oct-21 11:34:12

I thought it was about the sky and origins of the planets! ?

poshpaws Sun 24-Oct-21 11:27:40

Hi! I haven't a clue, myself, about growing Cosmos, but this link might prove invaluable:

www.rhs.org.uk/plants/popular/cosmos

Hope it manages to flower for you before the first of the frosts.

Witzend Sun 24-Oct-21 11:21:03

It’s a plant I bought months ago in a fundraiser sale at Gdcs’ school. I kept expecting it to flower, but it just went on getting taller and taller, until finally at not far off 5 feet, it’s branched out into several side shoots - with buds.
I’m now wondering whether they’ll actually flower before a frost gets them.
Dd has a similar monster from the same sale in her garden, but hers has finally flowered.

Are these very tall cosmos a thing now? Should I have ‘topped’ it to encourage side shoots? I’d always thought of cosmos as a ‘normal’ sized plant for a border.