DAZZLING, BRILLIANT WHITE BLOOMS TO BRIGHTEN YOUR SUMMER LANDSCAPE
FEATURES:
- Large, long lasting blooms on a compact, tidy mound of green foliage
- Encourage a longer blooming period by deadheading the blooms
- Foliage will remain evergreen in mild climates
- Pollinator friendly, deer and rabbit resistant
- Wonderful addition to cottage gardens, edging in a formal landscape, or a cut-flower garden
- Hand Selected, Fresh from the Grower
- Ships in a plant-safe designed box
Growth Facts
- Hardiness Zone: 4-9
- Mature Height: 12-18'' tall
- Mature Width: 12'' wide
- Exposure: Full Sun
- Spacing: 12'' apart
DAZZLING, BRILLIANT WHITE BLOOMS TO BRIGHTEN YOUR SUMMER LANDSCAPE
FEATURES:
- Large, long lasting blooms on a compact, tidy mound of green foliage
- Encourage a longer blooming period by deadheading the blooms
- Foliage will remain evergreen in mild climates
- Pollinator friendly, deer and rabbit resistant
- Wonderful addition to cottage gardens, edging in a formal landscape, or a cut-flower garden
- Hand Selected, Fresh from the Grower
- Ships in a plant-safe designed box
Growth Facts
- Hardiness Zone: 4-9
- Mature Height: 12-18'' tall
- Mature Width: 12'' wide
- Exposure: Full Sun
- Spacing: 12'' apart
Why plant Snowcap Shasta Daisy?
Nothing says sweet summer days like the Shasta Daisy. During the warm season, this perennial border staple opens its gleaming white blossoms in gardens everywhere. The cheerful blooms are a sure mood-lifter. Welcome the beloved Shasta Daisy into your own garden with Snowcap. Snowcap is a compact variety that forms a tidy mound of leathery green foliage and holds its full-size flowers on short, sturdy stems. Use it to edge a formal landscape bed, or mix it with other low-growing Spirits in a carefree cottage garden planting. Snowcap is ready to celebrate summer in any way you wish!
The wild daisies you see growing along the roadsides is the weedy European import called the Oxeye Daisy. While it’s great for making daisy chains, it isn’t a great garden plant. In the 1890s, legendary plant breeder Luther Burbank set out to make it a better garden plant. He hybridized the Oxeye Daisy with two other European daisies and a Japanese daisy for good measure. Burbank worked in California and named his introduction after Mt. Shasta in the northern part of that state. Snowcap Shasta Daisy is a selection that was developed by famous British gardener Alan Bloom in the 1980s.
How to use Snowcap Shasta Daisy in the landscape?
While Snowcap Shasta Daisy stems are short, they’re just long enough to make for good cutting material. You’ll be able to have pretty bouquets for the table when summer arrives. Cutting Snowcap flowers also encourages new buds to form, ensuring that you’ll have a long-lasting display.
Planting Zones
Hardiness Zone: 4-9
How To Plant Snowcap Shasta Daisy
Snowcap Shasta Daisy likes to be in full sun, though it will tolerate very light shade. It appreciates regular water, but it needs freely draining soil, especially in winter, when it is vulnerable to rotting in saturated ground.
How To Water
Water twice weekly for the first 3-5 weeks; then water weekly for the remainder of the year until winter. When you water, water slowly and thoroughly. Watering needs may be altered due to extreme weather conditions.
How To Fertilize
Snowcap Shasta Daisy responds favorably to an annual spring dose of Bower & Branch Elements™ Fertilizer.
How To Prune
Cut the flower stems down in fall if you find them unsightly; otherwise, wait until spring to do so. The foliage will remain evergreen in mild climates. Dig up and divide clumps every two or three years to keep plants growing vigorously.