Suncrest
ADS: 6010, BA, LB
Height: 4’
Bloom: 3”, Ball
Notes: Suncrest is an all round winner of a dahlia! Its gorgeous, buttery-yellow, perfect ball shaped blooms, are upright facing and carried on strong stems, making it a great additions to bouquets and garden beds. Flowers are particularly weather resistant and have a great vase life. The rosy orange centres give it depth and makes it to blend well with summer and autumn colour palettes. Suncrest has similar colouring to Blyton Softer Gleam and Blah Blah Blah.
ADS: 6010, BA, LB
Height: 4’
Bloom: 3”, Ball
Notes: Suncrest is an all round winner of a dahlia! Its gorgeous, buttery-yellow, perfect ball shaped blooms, are upright facing and carried on strong stems, making it a great additions to bouquets and garden beds. Flowers are particularly weather resistant and have a great vase life. The rosy orange centres give it depth and makes it to blend well with summer and autumn colour palettes. Suncrest has similar colouring to Blyton Softer Gleam and Blah Blah Blah.
ADS: 6010, BA, LB
Height: 4’
Bloom: 3”, Ball
Notes: Suncrest is an all round winner of a dahlia! Its gorgeous, buttery-yellow, perfect ball shaped blooms, are upright facing and carried on strong stems, making it a great additions to bouquets and garden beds. Flowers are particularly weather resistant and have a great vase life. The rosy orange centres give it depth and makes it to blend well with summer and autumn colour palettes. Suncrest has similar colouring to Blyton Softer Gleam and Blah Blah Blah.
For best results, grow your dahlias in a sunny spot, with fertile, well-drained soil. Stake flowers for support and deadhead/ harvest blooms regularly. This will encourage the plant to keep producing flowers. Lift tubers after the first frost and store them in a cool, dry place where they won’t freeze. In March, they can be potted up and kept in a temperate greenhouse before planting out, or tubers can be planted directly into the garden after the risk of frost has passed. We plant directly into prepared beds, with a handful of organic fertilizer into each hole. Once planted, the tubers do not need water until shoots have emerged from the soil, as it can cause them to rot. Once they get growing, they will need regular watering, approximately every three days or more if the weather is hot.