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Scientific American Supplement, No. 484, April 11, 1885 by Various
page 116 of 127 (91%)
established by long usage, and perhaps was originally given in contrast to
the few-flowered habit of H. annuus, for the type of the species is more
floriferous than the variety of which Asa Gray says that it is "known only
in cultivation from early times, must have been derived from
decapetalus," a statement which gardeners would hardly have accepted on
less indisputable authority, as they will all think the habit and
appearance of the two plants widely different. The variety multiflorus has
several forms; the commonest form is double, the disk being filled with
ligules much shorter than those of the ray flowers, after the form of many
daisy-like composites. In this double form the day flowers are often
wanting. It is common also on old plants in poor soils to see double and
single flowers from the same root. In the single forms the size of the
flowers varies, the difference being due to cultivation as often as to
kind. I have obtained by far the finest flowers by the following
treatment: In early spring, when the young shoots are about an inch high,
cut some off, each with a portion of young root, and plant them singly in
deep rich soil, and a sheltered but not shaded situation. By August each
will have made a large bush, branching out from one stalk at the base,
with from thirty to forty flowers open at a time, each 5 inches across.
The same plants if well dressed produce good flowers the second season,
but after that the stalks become crowded, and the flowers degenerate. The
same treatment suits most of the perennial sunflowers. The following kinds
are mentioned in the order in which they occur in Asa Gray's book:

[Illustration: HELIANTHUS MULTIFLORUS, SHOWING HABIT OF GROWTH.]


ANNUALS.

_H. argophyllus_ (white-leaved, not argyrophyllus, silver-leaved, as
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