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Growing Dahlias – An Easy Guide for Home Gardeners

Growing dahlias can be a rewarding experience for any home gardener. Their beautiful blooms take center stage in our flower garden beds in late summer and continue their show until the first frost. Whether you’re a beginner gardener or an experienced gardener this article is for you if you’d like to add these gorgeous stately flowers to your flower gardens.  Are you ready to grow some beautiful dahlias? Let’s get started!

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Have you ever seen Dahlia plants in pots at your local garden center? Yes, they have the small border or pot dahlias, but I’m talking about the tall variety. Likely not. So to have these beauties in your flower gardens, in all likelihood, you need to grow them from tubers.

Common Questions About Dahlias

First of all, let’s answer a few common questions about dahlias.

Are dahlias easy to grow? Yes, absolutely. Even a beginner gardener can grow dahlias. 

Do dahlias come back every year? Yes and no. Dahlias are winter hardy only in the warmer climates. So in USDA hardiness zones 7 and below, dahlia tubers must be dug up and stored over winter. Stay tuned and we’ll give instructions for this later in this post. As an alternative to overwintering dahlias, you can treat them as an annual flower, do nothing and leave the tubers in the ground all winter. The tubers will decay and become organic matter for the soil. 

Bright yellow American Sun Dahlia
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American Sun Dahlia

Different Categories of Dahlias

There are probably 1000s of different dahlia varieties and they are classified by size and form.

Dahlia Classification by Flower Size:

  • Miniature (up to 4 inches in diameter)
  • Small (4 to 6 inches)
  • Medium (6 to 8 inches)
  • Large (8 to 10 inches)*
  • Giant (over 10 inches)*

*Large and giant dahlias are often referred to as ā€œdinner plateā€ dahlias.

In addition to the size of the flower, different varieties of dahlias grow at varying heights.

Dahlia Classification by Flower Form:

  • Single: Single row of petals around a central disc
  • Collarette: Small ruffles around the disc
  • Peony: Multiple rows of petals with no visible central disc
  • Anemone: Tubular petals on top of larger, flat petals
  • Ball and Pompon: Globe-shaped with tightly rolled petals
  • Cactus and Semi-Cactus: Pointed petals, curled or twisted
Unknown variety of a cactus style dahlia.
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Unknown Cactus Form Dahlia

How to Plant Dahlia Tubers

The instructions for planting dahlia tubers are the same for planting in containers or planting in the ground.

For this section, we will assume that you have purchased new Dahlia tubers. When you open the package, the tubers should be dry and firm like a potato, but not shriveled. The tuber should not be mushy or smelly. If that is the case, pitch those tubers or return them. The same is true for dahlia tubers that you over-wintered.

There will be a crown with an old stem and the tubers will hang from that. You may or may not be able to see eyes on the tubers up around the crown. Those little eyes or growth buds will grow into new stems.

For a single tuber to be viable, it needs to have a neck (sometimes referred to as the crown), an eye and the main tuber. Yes, you can grow a beautiful dahlia plant from a single tuber. If the growing conditions are right during the first year, the plant will produce more tubers and just keep multiplying every year.

Just like with many flowers and perennials, dahlias like to grow in fertile soil with good drainage. And, to live their best lives and reward you with lots of blooms, they need to be planted in full sun. 

Dig a hole deep enough so the tuber can be placed on its side or standing up with the crown or stem pointed up. 

Bury the entire tuber so that the crown is covered by about 2 inches of soil. 

This might sound a little intimidating especially if you are new to planting dahlias. If the tubers are in good shape, your dahlias will grow, even if you don’t place them exactly right. Just be sure to get the crown or the stem facing up and they will be fine.

Water your planting area well and wait. It can take up to 2-3 weeks before you see signs of growth.

Dahlia flower variety Cafe Au Lait
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Cafe Au Lait Dahlia

Planting Time – When Can Dahlias be Planted Outdoors

Dahlia tubers can be planted outdoors in the spring after the danger of frost has passed in your area and the soil has warmed to around 50 degrees Fahrenheit. 

How to Get a Head Start Growing Dahlias

Because I live in zone 4b/5a and our growing season is relatively short, my preferred method of growing dahlias is to start them in early April in my portable, pop-up greenhouse. If you don’t have a greenhouse, and you have the room, you can start them indoors.

When the weather has warmed up and we’re past frost danger, the young plants are already 1 to 2 feet tall and have a head start over dahlias that are just being planted.

The basic planting instructions are the same as above. Start with a 1-gallon nursery pot and add a few inches of a quality potting mix to the bottom of the pot. Then place the dahlia tubers (with the tubers hanging down from the crown) into the pot and fill in around the tubers with potting mix, covering the crown or stem with about 2 inches of soil. If you are planting a single tuber, lay it on its side with the eye facing up. I gently water the freshly planted tubers and then fill in with more soil where the soil has settled.

Whether you pot your tubers up early, or plant them directly in the garden, it can take up to 2-3 weeks for new shoots to start showing, so be patient.

For more ways to get a jumpstart on more flowers grown from bulbs or tubers, be sure to check out this post when you’ve finished up here.

Beautiful Cornel Bronze Dahlia flower.
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