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News » 01.07.2026 - Keeping garden chrysanthemums together

Garden chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum ×morifolium) are commonly evaluated by plant height, canopy diameter, color development, and overall fullness as they approach the fall sales season. However, a plant can meet its target size and still have weak structural integrity. Branches that are elongated, soft, poorly branched, or crowded within the canopy may not be able to support the weight of developing flowers or withstand environmental and handling stresses. As a result, plants that initially appear marketable can quickly become open, uneven, or damaged late in production.

Growers may use the term "splitting" to describe several related crop-quality problems. In some cases, branches splay outward from the center of the plant, causing the canopy to lose its rounded form. In other cases, stems bend or break after heavy rainfall, wind, overhead irrigation, handling, or transport. Multi-cutting containers may also split when individual rooted cuttings separate rather than growing together into one cohesive canopy.

Although splitting often becomes noticeable late in production, the underlying problem usually develops much earlier. Crowding, excessive extension growth, soft stems, cultivar vigor, poor planting configuration, and inadequate support can all contribute to weak plant architecture. A heavy rain event or shipment may reveal the problem, but those events are often only the final stress placed on an already vulnerable crop.

Preventing garden mum splitting therefore requires growers to manage plant structure throughout production rather than relying on late-season corrective actions.
 

Source: www.floraldaily.com


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