{"id":10093,"date":"2010-07-12T12:51:00","date_gmt":"2010-07-12T16:51:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2020-08-13T18:44:19","modified_gmt":"2020-08-13T22:44:19","slug":"black-calla-lilies-and-green-zinnias","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gardern.co.za\/2010\/07\/black-calla-lilies-and-green-zinnias\/","title":{"rendered":"Black Calla Lilies and Green Zinnia’s"},"content":{"rendered":"
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This weekend I picked some of the black and green flowers in the garden, in an effort to make an arrangement for a dinner that felt more stylish, yet botanically interesting. Playing with color, and being more aware about color, this year I have been trying more dark, black and green flowers, but things never really work out the way we plan, for my ‘black and purple’ vegetable garden bed has yet to materialize. These calla bulbs were intended for the black garden, but I ran out of room this spring, so I planted them along the greenhouse bed, where they are now lost under a jungle of growth from the Amaranth which now towers 6 feet over them.<\/div>\n
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Black, or technically dark red flowers, as well as green flowers are currently stylish with floral designers. Black calla’s are much smaller than the standard white calla lilies, infinitely tiny in comparison, but they produce more flowers from each bulb. Ordered this spring, the black callas were planted infront of the greenhouse along with the green amaranth ( the green stuff tumbling out of the arrangement). The Amaranth, or Love Lies Bleeding, has grown so tall, that the calla’s are practically lost, so I decided to pick all of them.<\/div>\n