{"id":8718,"date":"2011-06-16T02:21:00","date_gmt":"2011-06-16T06:21:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2020-08-13T18:30:57","modified_gmt":"2020-08-13T22:30:57","slug":"yellow-peonies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gardern.co.za\/2011\/06\/yellow-peonies\/","title":{"rendered":"Labradoodles of the Plant World"},"content":{"rendered":"
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‘BARTZELLA’, A NOW FAMOUS, YELLOW INTERSECTIONAL PEONY, WHICH IS BEGINNING TO BECOME MORE AVAILABLE, AS WELL AS MORE AFFORDABLE.<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n
Everyone loves peonies but it’s time for something new, or at least, new to your local garden center. There are the ordinary pink or while peonies, and there are elegant tree peonies, and dwarf rock-garden peonies, but a rather new peony is making every type of peony jealous. Meet the Intersectional Peony, tough name to remember perhaps, but the concept is simple to understand, quite simply, two sections of Paeonia (Peonies) were crossed to get a new ‘sectional’ or, essentially, a new sort of ‘species’ ( used in a way to understand it better). Think of it this way – there are no intersectional peonies found in the wild. This was something humans had to help achieve. Essentially, Interspecific’s are the Labradoodles of the plantworld.<\/p>\n
Early plant breeders took the old-fashioned herbaceous peony, P. lactiflora (the sort which die to the ground every year) and then crossed it with a tree peony ( P. lemoinei) and the result was the Intersectional peony. A vigorous, large plant that can be covered in hundreds of flowers, often in colors only found in tree peonies like yellow and orange. Best of all, these peonies die back to the ground again every year thus greatly extending the hardiness range of tree peonies for those of us who struggle wintering them over beyond Zone 6.<\/p>\n
To be more accurate, Intersectionals are not truly new, the first crosses between herbaceous and tree peonies occurred in the late 1940’s by Toichi Itoh himself, but these plants took years to reach blooming size, and until a few years ago, the only way to propagate plants was through division, making retail sales impractical since factoring the time it took for a plant to reach blooming size, the best crosses sold for nearly $1000.00. Today, many Intersectionals are available, and they are often labeled as Itoh Hybrids, but in fact, there are a number of breeders today making even better crosses, yet the proper way to call these plants remains Itoh Peonies or Intersectionals. Through modern micro-propagation techniques, new hybrids are starting to reach the market for less money. Invest in a couple and watch what happens.<\/p>\n