The Georgia Plant Selection Committee has unveiled its 2002
Georgia Gold Medal winners on a new Web site (www.georgiagoldmedal.com
).
The committee selects a Georgia Gold Medal winner each year in
four classes: annuals, herbaceous perennials, woody ornamentals
and trees. Since 1994, the program has helped many deserving
plants break into Georgia landscapes.
It’s extremely hard to get a promising new plant accepted in the
landscape trade, said Gary Wade, an Extension Service
horticulturist with the University of Georgia College of
Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
Vicious Cycle
The main hurdle a plant must clear is a matter of supply and
demand, Wade said. If it’s not popular, the demand is low, so
growers don’t supply many, so prices stay high, so demand stays
low….
“It’s a vicious cycle,” he said. “Plants have to go through a
tough period of introduction. It can be a wonderful plant, but it
takes a while for it to break into the market.”
Some plants that could be prized additions to your landscape
might never make it there. “These are plants that are already out
there in the market,” he said of the Georgia Gold Medal winners.
“They’re proven, superior plants, but are underused.”
The Georgia Gold Medal winners were revealed to growers last
summer so they could propagate ample supplies.
The 2002 Georgia Gold Medal selections:
- Annual: Lady in Red salvia (Salvia
coccinea). - Perennial: Blue Mist bluebeard (Caryopteris x
clandonensis). - Shrub: purple beauty-berry (Callicarpa
dichotoma). - Tree: Forest Pansy, Oklahoma and Texas White redbuds
(Cercis canadensis).
See these and other Georgia Gold Medal winners since 1994 on the
Web at www.georgiagoldmedal.com
.