On Gardening: Truffula Pink gomphrena selected Proven Winners' Annual of the Year

At The Landings Center in Columbus, Georgia, the old fashioned horse troughs are always ready for the camera as well as the dining experience. This trough is just one of several on this day that was featuring Truffula Pink gomphrena as it helped create a festive living bouquet with Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana, Supertunia Vista Fuchsia and Supertunia Lovie Dovie petunias. (Norman Winter/TNS)
At The Landings Center in Columbus, Georgia, the old fashioned horse troughs are always ready for the camera as well as the dining experience. This trough is just one of several on this day that was featuring Truffula Pink gomphrena as it helped create a festive living bouquet with Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana, Supertunia Vista Fuchsia and Supertunia Lovie Dovie petunias. (Norman Winter/TNS)

No town will have more of a cause to join the celebration for Truffula Pink gomphrena as the Annual of the Year than Columbus, Georgia. The award selected by Proven Winners says a lot, considering they are the home of all of the Supers: Supertunia petunias, Superbells calibrachoas and Superbena verbenas.

The last few years in Columbus, Truffula Pink has been like queen of the court in Old Town, an incredible designer community in North Columbus. From historical-looking homes with dreamy cottage gardens to artsy horse trough containers, Truffula Pink has been there, showing off her hot pink blooms.

Then there is The Landings, the premier shopping or lifestyle center in town, where everyone goes to shop, dine and of course, see the flowers creating a resort-like atmosphere. Be prepared, on more than one occasion clients have had to dodge hummingbirds and butterflies as they walked into a store.

Pollinators were something most of us could have only imagined. Oh, we expected the occasional visitor, but never did we dream of it being a butterfly champ where swallowtails come in four at a time, zebra longwings three at a time and the bright orange Gulf fritillaries challenging each other for a spot at the Truffula Cafe. Believe me, if you are creating a butterfly garden, Truffula Pink gomphrena has to have a spot.

Truffula Pink is known botanically as Gomphrena pulchella and is native to South America. As a globe amaranth, its name is associated not only with beauty but love and immortality due to its ability to be cut for the vase and dried in perpetuity. You must watch Laura LeBoutillier, the internet star of "Garden Answer," to not only see her stands of Truffula Pink gomphrena in the garden, but to watch her talents as she creates an incredible wreath with the flowers.

Truffula Pink needs full sun and fertile, well-drained soil to really perform to its capability. Letting these great plants sit in wet, soggy soil will be a crime. You will want to space your plants 12 to 18 inches apart and apply a good layer of mulch after planting. It is a great plant for mass planting. Expect your Truffula Pink to get about 2 feet tall and bloom until frost.

The Garden Guy has had them in containers as the thriller plant partnered with Whirlwind Blue scaevola, Superbells Double Blue calibrachoa and Goldilocks creeping Jenny. In the landscape I have had it in several combinations, some with Illusion Emerald Lace ornamental sweet potatoes, others with Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana and some with Sunstar pentas. It is one of the toughest, most carefree plants you will ever grow.

This last season I used it with the new Meant to Bee Queen Nectarine and Royal Raspberry agastaches, or hummingbird mints, that are making their debut this year. In Mrs. Sylvette's cottage garden in Old Town she grew dozens of Truffula Pink gomphrenas with Luscious Royale Cosmo lantanas and yellow Coreopsis verticillatas. The entire front yard was lined with the flowers, to the delight of the throngs of us that line her street to see the flowers throughout the growing season.

At The Garden Guy's house, I am happy to report mine are returning this spring, even after the shocking December arctic blast. This has happened a couple of other years even though I am in zone 8a (9-11 are their recommended perennial zones). Truffula Pink has won 50 awards and most likely in your state if they have a plant trial program. But don't forget that this annual, as National Plant of the Year, is worth every penny spent.

(Norman Winter, horticulturist, garden speaker and author of "Tough-as-Nails Flowers for the South" and "Captivating Combinations: Color and Style in the Garden." Follow him on Facebook NormanWinterTheGardenGuy.)

photo Truffula Pink gomphrena is Proven Winners National Plant of the Year for 2023 but has been celebrated in Columbus, Georgia since its debut. Here in Old Town of North Columbus it reigns supreme in a horse trough with Luscious Citron lantana and Supertunia Vista Bubblegum. (Norman Winter/TNS)
photo It is a rare year that the Zebra longwing makes it to Columbus but the last time they were here, three were seen feeding on Truffula Pink gomphrena. (Norman Winter/TNS)
photo This cottage garden in Old Town is known for its expanse of colorful flowers lining the property. Here you see Truffula Pink gomphrena, Luscious Royale Cosmo lantana and the yellow coreopsis welcoming everyone who drives or flies by. (Norman Winter/TNS)
photo Gulf Fritillaries are also quite fond of the Truffula Pink gomphrena, here two feast on a combination planting that included the ColorBlaze Strawberry Drop coleus. (Norman Winter/TNS)
photo The homes of Old Town have an aura of yesteryear. This features border columns with Supertunia Bordeaux and Supertunia Vista Silverberry along with Diamond Frost euphorbia and Truffula Pink gomphrena as the thriller plants. (Norman Winter/TNS)

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