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Weigela florida ‘Tango’
Hardy in zones 4 through 8.
I think Tango Weigela is an awesome plant and it’s a crazy hot seller for me. It is one of the more compact weigelas and has redish, purple dark leaves with flowers that are red to deep red.
This is one of those plants that I love recommending to people because I know it will work out well for them. Some plants, I can barely bring myself to recommend to a customer. If a plant doesn’t appeal to me I have a difficult time suggesting somebody else buy it and plants like that usually get purged from my nursery fairly quickly.
Tango Weigela blooms like crazy in the spring then continues to sporadically make flowers all through the summer right on into the fall. The deep red flowers contrast nicely against the dark maroon leaves.
This plant can easily be kept trimmed to a height and width of 18″ if that’s what you need or if left untrimmed it can get 3′ wide and high. It responds well to pruning and a mid summer pruning usually stimulates a new batch of flowers.
Tango Weigela is very easy to grow and very easy to propagate. This is a plant that propagates easily from softwood cuttings starting mid June (mid May in warmer states) and you can continue to stick cuttings right up until the ground freezes in the winter. The only time that I would not attempt to propagate this plant is in the early spring when the new growth is too soft to work with.
For a complete understanding of how to propagate this plant both winter and summer see these two articles.
Easy Summer Plant Propagation.
Easy Winter Plant Propagation.
Both rooted cuttings and liners of Tango Weigela are both a big hit in The Buy/Sell Section of Our Members Area, usually selling out very quickly.
A rooted cutting is exactly as it sounds, a cutting, pretty much a stick, with some leaves and roots on the bottom. A liner is a rooted cutting that has been grown out for one growing season. It is starting to branch out and has a much heavier root system than a rooted cutting.
Liners of course bring more money than rooted cuttings but are still small enough to ship just about anywhere in a Box like This One that Nathan Sent Me Full of Plants.
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