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Mums Flowers: Your Fall Planting Guide

Mums Flowers

When summer fades and fall arrives, it can be hard not to mourn the loss of daylight and brightly colored blooms. Have no fear, however, because your garden can flourish in color well after August comes to a close. Fall decorating with mums, or chrysanthemums, provides endless beauty as one season changes to the next.

Mums, which are bright and versatile, are a fall gardening favorite. With hundreds of varieties that tend to thrive in cooler temperatures, you can create beautiful harvest presentations. Native to Asia and northeastern Europe, mums give you the option to choose from a number of various colors, shapes and bloom times. Mums also prosper in containers, so you can easily use them to decorate indoors. They look great in clay pots or lined up in a window box. They add texture to any garden or indoor space, and they provide an easy and inexpensive pop of color.

You can find mums at almost any garden store or center. Although mums are best when planted in the spring, these stores often sell them year-round. From vibrant purples and yellows to blazing oranges, reds and pinks, mums promise new life anywhere you choose to plant them.

Florist and Hardy Mums

There are two different types of mum plants that stem from the same original parent. Florist, or cutting mums, have larger flowers and form a variety of bloom shapes. These types of mums grow only in greenhouses and are mainly indoor plants. Florist mums are often used in the short-term, as they lack underground stolons, which are what a plant uses to survive in cold temperatures. You can plant a florist mum, but it will not survive the winter no matter how much protection it receives.

Hardy mums, or garden mums, however, produce much stronger root systems, allowing them to withstand colder temperatures. Hardy mums are usually perennials that are much tougher than the florist variety.

Caring for Mums

Mums can be planted as both annuals and perennials. Mums are typically inexpensive, so you won’t feel guilty planting them as annuals, since planting in the fall reduces their ability to survive a cold winter. If your plan is to keep them as perennials, it’s best to plant in the spring to give the roots more time to establish themselves. These roots are fragile and easily damaged by the winter’s ongoing cycle of freezing and thawing.

Mum plants require a little bit of maintenance if you plan to keep them past the winter. To help with the process, cut the plants back to the ground after the first hard frost. Then, apply a thick layer of mulch to protect the plant roots. After the last hard frost, remove the mulch and wait for new mum blossoms to appear.

Here are some more mum-care best practices:

Pinching Back Your Mums

Mums begin to sprout in the spring and grow in a bush-like shape. As a result, a mum plant left un-pruned often develops a gaping hole in the center as the weight of the flower blossoms pulls the individual stems outward. To prevent this from happening, it’s important to pinch back your mums starting in early spring and continuing throughout the growing season, beginning once the plant is about five inches tall.

To pinch back your mums, place your index finger and thumb about two inches from the base of the stem and just above a leaf. Pluck the stem just above the leaf. Continue to pluck throughout the plant and repeat this process once the plant reaches about five inches in height again.

Tips for Decorating with Mums

Popular Varieties of Mums

Mums in Your Yard

How does your yard look? Send us a photo of your mums. Do you have any questions about the care of mums? Leave us a comment below.