A kingdom of dahlias, as far as the eye can see

CORNWALL — Most mornings, Amanda Chase is rolling out of bed to head to her full-time job. As her feet touch the floor, she can see out the window. This time of year, it is an amazing sight. Thousands of dahlias bloom across her yard in a sea of color.

“That’s all I need, and I can face another day in a good mood,” she said.

Over about 17 years, Chase turned her passion into a business: Something to Crow About Dahlias. Her perfect blooms sell from a stand in her driveway at 34 Furnace Brook Road (Route 4) to restaurants and floral designers for weddings. 

“It just evolved. Dahlias are very prolific. Once they’re in the ground, they pretty much do their own thing.”

Dinner and other evening pursuits come second, usually after she spends the last of the daylight in the garden. She snipped stems for an order last week and wondered when the first frost will come. That will be it for the flowers, but it also ushers in one of her busiest times. 

“The dahlias loved the cooler weather this summer, but it looks like we will have an early frost. Then the real fun comes.”

During the blooming period, Chase handles the cutting and other garden chores mostly herself. It is in the spring and fall that family and hired help descend. All 1,800 or so tubers need to be dug up before the ground freezes, and planted again when it thaws.

A lot of credit goes to her grown daughters, Stephanie and Allison, who help with those chores, and with farm markets on the weekends. 

A recent open house, advertised only by word-of-mouth attracted quite a lot of people. Dahlia enthusiasts love the variations. There are 42 species and at least 200 varieties. Chase has most of them.

Chase offers some advice. She installs netting horizontally over the beds to support the stems as the grow up through it. Drip irrigation, diligent dead-heading and not over-fertilizing are key. 

“If you’re growing a big garden and plan to cut flowers, grow the smaller blooms. Otherwise, all it takes is a good rainstorm and you’ll come out to find your blooms on the ground.”

The garden slopes down to a row of newly prepared beds that will take the dahlia’s domain to the the extent of the open portion of the yard with next year’s expansion. Chase plans to eventually have pine trees at the front of her yard cut down to make way for more.

For more information, go to www.somethingtocrowaboutdahlias.com

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