■fl p v,i. )■ >rnt«’r3 v J BlMancaatar Faimtafl, Saturday. May 1. M»3 »■ /ed pansies work best because they “have more Impact, more bang for the buck, for their roadside recognition,” sald Bruce Hellerlck, Lancaster extension agent, second from left, who showed the Idea Garden to Master Gardeners. He said that gardeners should choose the single color that best fits into the landscape. The Multifloral , Mellifluous, Memorable Pansy ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) When considering robust, col orful, fragrant flowers for the home or office gardenscape, don’t forget that 1993 is the Year of the Pansy. These “face”-like flowers, with single blooms and five petals rounded in shape, come in a multi tude of colors and some are very fragrant. The National Garden Bureau recently designated this year as the Year of the Pansy, a delicate look ing flower that is “quite durable and a flower for all seasons,” according to the bureau’s Pansy Fact Sheet. A plethora of pansies were on hand to greet visitors last week at the Lancaster Farm and Home Center. Many of the extension’s Master Gardener graduates literal ly ‘ ‘pitched in’ ’ and helped festoon the outside of the Farm and Home Center building with the fragrant and would you believe edible? blooms. Bruce Hellerick, extension agent, said the pansy is an under rated plant in many landscapes. ‘ ‘One of the things the Idea Garden is trying to foster is to show how jgnatedthls yurt. jnsy, adallcate looking flower that it quite durable and a flower for all seasons, according to tha bureau’s Pansy Fact Sheet. A plethora of pansies were on hand to greet visitors last week at the Lancaster Farm and Home Center. beautiful the pansy is and how use ful it can be to any landscape,” he said. For many home gardeners, indeed, the challenge rests in try ing to come up with the right color combinations. Single-colored pan sies work best because they “have more impact, more bang for the buck, for their roadside recogni tion,” said Hellerick. He said that gardeners should choose the single color that best fits into the landscape. If the gardener prefers fragrance over roadside eye appeal, then they should select the yellow or blue pansies, which seem to have the strongest scent, according to the fact sheet. In general, according to the sheet, the history of the pansy is linked to the viola, its ancestor. The word pansy comes from the French “pensee,” which means “thought or remembrance.’’ Pansy blooms are single with five petals that are rounded in shape. The flowers have one of three basic color patterns. Blooms can be a single, clear color, such as yellow or blue. A second pattern is a single color having black lines radiating from the center these ate called penciling and are similar to viola markings. The last type is familiar to most home gardeners the bloom has a dark center called a “face.” Colors include red, purple, blue, bronze, pink, black, yellow, white, lavender, orange, apricot, and mahogany. The plant itself is com pact, not more than nine inches in both height and spread, and bears many stems. Varieties include large (3'A to 4'A inches), medium (214 to 3'A inches), and multiflora (114 to 214 inches). Most are in series, including Crystal Bowl, Accord, Imperial, Majestic, Crown, Maximum, and Universal. According to Hellerick, the pan sies represent a test of hardiness conducted at the center. Trans plants from four-inch pots, market packs (six plants in a pack), and bareroots were used. The four-inch pot transplants, because of their large root system, did the best, fol lowed by die market packs, and lastly by the bareroot plants (many of which died). Pansies are available most gar den centers for up to $2 for a six pack. Ina few weeks, other new plants with the idea garden will come into bloom, according to Hellerick, including the Calendulas ("pot marigolds”) and Dianthus (a single camation-like flower). See your nearest (SEW HOLLANJ Dealer for Dependable Equipment and Dependable Service: PENNSYLVANIA Annvdle, PA BHM Farm Equipment, Inc. RDI, Rte. 934 717-867-2211 Carlisle, PA R&W Equipment Co. 35 East Willow Street 717-243-2686 Oavldsburg, PA George N. Gross, Inc. R.D. 2, Dover, PA 717-292-1673 Elizabethtown, PA Messick Farm Equipment, Inc. Rt. 283 - Rheem’s Exit 717-367-1319 Halifax, PA Sweigard Bros. R.D. 3, Box 13 717-896-3414 Honey Brook, PA Dependable Motor Co. East Main Street 215-273-3131 215-273-3737 Honey Grove, PA Norman D. Clark & Son, Inc. Honey Grtve, PA 717-734-3682 LoysvWe, PA 717-789-3117 MARYLAND Frederick, MD CeresviHe Ford New Holland, Inc. Rt. 26 East 301-662-4197 Outside MD. 800-331-9122 NEW JERSEY Bridgeton, N.J. Leslie G. Fogg, Inc. Canton & Stow Creek Landing Rd. 609-451-2727 609-935-5145 Woodstown, NJ Owen Supply Co. Broad Street & East Avenue 609-769-0308 Hughesvllle, PA Farnsworth Farm Supplies, Inc. 103 Cemetery Street 717-584-2106 New Holland, PA A.B.C. Groff, Inc. 110 South Railroad 717-354-4191 Oley, PA C.J. Wona'dler Bros. R.D. 2 215-987-6257 Pitman, PA Schreffler Equipment Pitman, PA 717-648-1120 Quakertown, PA C.J. Wonsidler Bros. R.D. 1 215-536-1935 Tamaqua, PA Charles S. Snyder, Inc. R.D. 3 717-386-5945 West Grove, PA S.G. Lewis & Son, Inc. R.D. 2, Box 66 215-869-2214 Washington, NJ Smith Tractor & Equip., Inc. 15 HHlcrest Ave. 201-689-7900