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Iris ensata Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob - Japanese Water Iris

Iris ensata Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob
Japanese Water Iris, Sword-leaved Iris, Butterfly Iris

5,0/5
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Beautiful like bristle Unfortunately, they don't last long.

M, 15/09/2024

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This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

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Value-for-money
A Japanese iris with large 15cm (6in) flowers, flat, double, pale pink veined with a deeper pink, illuminated with lemon yellow in the centre. It is a perennial rhizomatous plant that thrives in moist soil, comfortable on the banks of a pond or in saturated soil during summer. It can be grown in full sun or light shade, with the stump planted 5 to 10cm (2 to 4in) above the water level, in light, acidic to neutral soil. Its cut flowers are sublime in bouquets!
Flower size
15 cm
Height at maturity
60 cm
Spread at maturity
50 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -29°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil, Damp soil
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Best planting time March to April
Recommended planting time February to April, September to November
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Flowering time July to August
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Description

Iris ensata 'Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob' is a magnificent Japanese water iris that produces flat and double flowers, particularly wide, of a delicate pastel pink. It is a mid-season variety that blooms in summer, between June and July. Unlike our garden irises, this rhizomatous perennial is comfortable in non-limestone and waterlogged soils in summer. Superb when planted en masse in wet areas and on the banks of water points, Iris ensata were once intensively cultivated in Japan, especially around Edo (the ancestor of Tokyo), for cut flowers.

Iris ensata (synonymous with kaempferi), hanashōbu in Japanese, better known as Japanese water iris, have nothing in common with our classic garden irises, except for their belonging to the Iridaceae family. The original Iris ensata is a fibrous rhizome plant native to Asia, more precisely to the wetlands of Japan, the Himalayas, and Siberia. These irises, known to be difficult to grow, like acidic and peaty soils (cannot tolerate excess limestone), are thirsty for water during their growth and flowering period, but appreciate slightly less moist soils in winter: in nature, they are found above the water level, which often drops in winter and then rises again in spring with the melting of snow.

The 'Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob' cultivar is a recent horticultural creation from the 'Dinner Plate' series, which brings together varieties with oversized and remarkably coloured flowers. This variety forms an erect, rather upright tuft of vegetation, composed of fine leaves. The plant will reach approximately 60cm (24in) in height when in flower and 50cm (20in) in width. This iris slowly spreads on the ground through its rhizomes, becoming more beautiful year after year. The deciduous foliage is medium green and composed of long, slender, sheathing leaves with a prominent central vein. The non-remontant flowering occurs in summer, more or less early depending on the climate. Flower stalks emerge from the clumps of leaves. Each one bears 2 to 3 very large flat flowers measuring 15cm (6in) in diameter. Each flower is composed of 6 large, flat, undulate sepals, topped with 3 slightly smaller petals and 3 erect styles. The petals and sepals are a pale lavender pink, finely veined with a deeper purple-pink, while the styles are pale yellow infused with pink. Bright yellow signals illuminate the entire flower in the centre.

Often cultivated on the banks of ponds and basins, Iris ensata, like many marsh plants, can live with their "feet" in water during summer, but their rhizomes do not tolerate being submerged during winter, especially if it is freezing. In our gardens, these Japanese irises will thrive in a loamy soil, enriched with compost, but not drying out in summer. Plant them, for example, in heavy soil forming a slight depression, at the bottom of a slope, or on a bank where the soil becomes moist through capillarity. Combine Iris ensata 'Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob' with other "Dinner Plate" varieties, Anemone rivularis, Darmera peltata, Lobelia 'Queen Victoria', Astilbes, Lysimachias, and Ligularias, for example.

Iris ensata Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob - Japanese Water Iris in pictures

Iris ensata Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob - Japanese Water Iris (Foliage) Foliage
Iris ensata Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob - Japanese Water Iris (Plant habit) Plant habit

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time July to August
Inflorescence Spike
Flower size 15 cm
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms
Flowering description Large pale pink with darker pink veining and a yellow centre.

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green
Foliage description Deciduous.

Plant habit

Height at maturity 60 cm
Spread at maturity 50 cm
Growth rate normal

Botanical data

Genus

Iris

Species

ensata

Cultivar

Dinner Plate Tub Tim Grob

Family

Iridaceae

Other common names

Japanese Water Iris, Sword-leaved Iris, Butterfly Iris

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference18740

Planting and care

Iris ensata plants prefer a moist and marshy, peaty soil without limestone. They also tolerate a simply fresh soil, even if it is not waterlogged, as long as it does not dry out in summer. On the other hand, they prefer a rather dry soil in winter. We have planted them near an artificial stream, with the water level kept high during the summer. In winter, we let the level drop by about 15cm (6in), so that the stumps are above the water, as in nature where the level of rivers decreases in winter and rises in spring with the melting snow. Their cold resistance is excellent up to about -18°C (-0.4°F). It is even increased if the soil is dry.

6
€19.50
16
€14.50 Each

Planting period

Best planting time March to April
Recommended planting time February to April, September to November

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Pond edge
Type of use Border
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 5 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Soil moisture Moist soil, Damp soil, Rich and clayey or peaty.

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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