Tuesday, April 16, 2024
Flowers

Basket of Gold Flowers – All You Need to Know About

With bright yellow, low-growing flowers, no wonder where the Basket of Gold Flowers got its name. Given its short height and golden color, this makes for a perfect addition to a rock garden or xeriscape.

Basket-of-Gold produces a blanket of bright yellow flowers in early to mid-spring on spreading clumps of oblong, gray-green foliage. Basket-of-Gold is best used in the front of a border or draping over the edges of stones in a rock garden.

It requires a Full Sun and a Well-drained soil. Zones: 4 – 8 with a Height of about 0.5 – 0.75 feet tall, it also blooms in Late Spring – Early Summer and is Deer resistant.

Basket-of-gold plants (Aurinia saxtilis) feature bright gold flowers that seem to reflect the sun’s golden rays. Although the individual flowers are small, they bloom in large clusters that intensify the effect.

The plants grow a foot high and as much as 2 feet wide, and they make fantastic ground covers for sunny areas. Basket-of-gold plant care is easy in areas with mild summers, but in hot, humid climates they tend to die back in midsummer.

If shearing doesn’t revive them, try growing them as annuals. Sow seeds in summer or set out bedding plants in early fall. Pull up the plants after they flower the following year.

Grow basket-of-gold flowers as perennials in USDA plant hardiness zones 3 through 7. How to Grow Basket-of-Gold Plant basket-of-gold in a sunny location with average, well-draining soil. The plants perform poorly in rich or overly moist sites.

Keep the soil moist while the seedlings are small. Once they are established, cut back to an occasional watering to keep the soil from drying out. An abundance of moisture causes root rot.

Use a very thin layer of organic mulch, or better yet, use gravel or another type of inorganic mulch. Shear off the top one-third of the plants in summer after the petals drop. Shearing revitalizes the plants and prevents them from going to seed.

The plants don’t need division to stay healthy, but if you want to divide them, do so right after shearing. In warm climates, you’ll have another opportunity to divide the plants in fall. Basket-of-gold plants only need fertilizer every other year or so.

Too much fertilizer results in poor flowering, and they may lose their compact shape. Scatter some organic fertilizer or a couple of handfuls of compost around the plants in fall.

You might find this plant labeled as yellow or basket-of-gold alyssum, although it is more closely related to rock cresses (Arabis spp.) than sweet alyssums.

Two interesting A. saxtilis cultivars are ‘Citrinum,’ which has lemon-yellow flowers, and Sunny Border Apricot, which has peachy-yellow blossoms.

You can create a striking effect by growing basket-of-gold in combination with ‘Citrinum.’ Basket-of-gold flowers make excellent companions for spring bulbs and sedums.

Read Also: Artemisia Flowers – All you need to know

Basket of Gold Flowers: All Common Names

Basket of Gold Flowers – All You Need to Know About

Basket-of-Gold, Goldentuft Madwort, Goldentuft Alyssum.

Family (English): Mustard.

Family (Botanic): Brassicaceae (Cruciferae).

Tree or Plant Type: Perennial.

Native Locale: Non-native.

Landscape Uses: Massing, Mixed border.

Size Range: Small plant (6-12 inches)

Light Exposure: Full sun (6 hrs. direct light daily). Partial sun/shade (4-6 hrs. light daily).

Hardiness Zones:

  • Zone 4.
  • Zone 5 (Chicago).
  • Zone 6.
  • Zone 7.

Soil Preference:

  • Dry soil.
  • Moist, well-drained soil.

Tolerances:

  • Dry sites.
  • Occasional drought.

Season of Interest:

  • Late spring.
  • Early summer.

Flower Color & Fragrance: Yellow.

Shape or Form: Creeping, and Weeping.

Growth Rate: Moderate.

Size: 9 to 12 inches tall, 18 inches wide, mounded and creeping.

Plant Care: Cut back by one-third to one-half after flowering to shape the plant and prolong life. Plant requires good drainage and prefers dry soil.  It will sprawl in overly rich soil. Prefers not to be divided. Semi-evergreen.

Diseases, pests and problems: No serious pests.  Plant is short-lived, especially in the southern portions of its zone.

Native geographic location and habitat: Russia, Turkey and central Europe.

Attracts birds or pollinators: Butterflies.

Leaf description: Leaves are alternate with one leaf per node.  They are 2 to 5 inches long with smaller stem leaves.  They are oblong, gray, and fuzzy.

Flower description: The bright yellow flowers are borne on panicles.  Each flower has four petals.

Fruit description: The fruit is a two-section dry pod, 1.5 to 3.5 inches, that splits open when ripe to release the seeds.

Compact Basket-of-Gold (Aurinia saxtilis ‘Compactum’):  This cultivar is smaller in stature, with a rounded habit and bright yellow flowers.  It grows to six to eight inches tall.

Read Also: Mosquitoes engineered to repel dengue virus

Agric4Profits

Benadine Nonye is an agricultural consultant and a writer with over 12 years of professional experience in the agriculture industry. - National Diploma in Agricultural Technology - Bachelor's Degree in Agricultural Science - Master's Degree in Science Education - PhD Student in Agricultural Economics and Environmental Policy... Visit My Websites On: 1. Agric4Profits.com - Your Comprehensive Practical Agricultural Knowledge and Farmer’s Guide Website! 2. WealthinWastes.com - For Effective Environmental Management through Proper Waste Management and Recycling Practices! Join Me On: Twitter: @benadinenonye - Instagram: benadinenonye - LinkedIn: benadinenonye - YouTube: Agric4Profits TV and WealthInWastes TV - Pinterest: BenadineNonye4u - Facebook: BenadineNonye

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