Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Gardener's Notebook: How to plant for fragrant summer nights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2020 09:53 PM
  • Gardener's Notebook: How to plant for fragrant summer nights

Neither evening stocks nor jasmine tobacco are particularly worthy plants by day. But as darkness falls, the petals of each of these flowers unfurl to release a delicious, heavy scent.

Jasmine tobacco’s petals unfold colorful or pure white trumpets, the latter of which especially glow in the moonlight. The small white petals of evening stocks shine like little, bright stars. These two unrelated plants make congenial companions for you and each other on summer nights.

TWO PLANTS FOR NIGHT-TIME FRAGRANCE

Jasmine tobacco is one of a few species of nicotiana (pronounced nee-KO-shee-ay-na), botanically Nicotiana alata. (Yes, the word “nicotiana” does look like “nicotine,” and smoking tobacco is another nicotiana species.)

All species of nicotiana are in the nightshade family and, like their relatives, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers, they demand a rich, warm soil in the sun. For earliest flowers, sow the seeds indoors a few weeks before the last spring frost.

Jasmine tobacco is an annual, each plant forming a rosette of leaves at ground level and a flowering spike a couple of feet high, or more. New varieties have been bred which are more compact and which bloom in daylight, hopefully with no loss of scent.

Stocks represent two species, one grown mostly for its showy flowers and the other for its nocturnal aroma. The scented stock, known as evening or night-scented stock, is botanically Matthiola bicornis.

Evening stock is an annual that blooms from July through September. In contrast to jasmine tobacco, evening stock is a low-growing, straggly plant, a ball of wiry stems with small leaves and flowers. The wilted remains of the previous night’s flowers and the unopened buds of flowers for nights to follow are not much to look at by day.

Another plant called “stock” but more commonly called hoary stock or tenweeks stock is, botanically, Matthiola incana. This one yields colorful, showy spikes of blossoms, also with fragrance.

AT THEIR BEST AT NIGHT

Because jasmine tobacco and evening stock are not at their best by day, consider hiding these Cinderellas among showier flowers. A nice companion for stocks is gazania, which provides just enough contrast to complement each plant. Like stock, gazania is low-growing with thin petals, but its flowers are large, solitary, sunny-yellow daisies. Keep gazania and stocks near the front of a sunny bed, where they will not be shaded or hidden by taller plants.

Tall, spiky jasmine tobacco needs to be placed near the back of a bed for visual balance. Fill the spaces jasmine tobacco will leave bare by day by combining it with other tall flowers such as large delphiniums or large zinnias and asters. In the evening, white jasmine tobacco flowers will come into view as the day-bloomers recede into the darkness.

Plant jasmine tobacco and evening stock where they can be enjoyed on summer nights. Outside my back door, I once had a small, semicircular flower bed that was home to both these night-scented plants. When atmospheric conditions were right, the fragrance could make you delirious. I am not sure what exactly those optimal atmospheric conditions were, but the typical calm summer night seemed to fill the bill. On such nights, the heavy aroma would gather beneath the window just above the flower bed, waiting to be wafted indoors by the slightest breeze.

That flower bed is gone, but a new one will be home to these plants next year, with delirious summer nights to follow.

___

Lee Reich has been writing a gardening column for The Associated Press for nearly 20 years. He has worked in plant and soil research with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Cornell University. His ``farmden" — more than a garden, less than a farm — in upstate New York is a testing and demonstration ground for techniques in soil care, pruning, and growing fruits and vegetables. His books include “The Pruning Book” and “Weedless Gardening.” He blogs at http://www.leereich.com/blog and can be reached at garden@leereich.com.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

WATCH: 'Smart' Japanese Hotel Opens Offering Guests Self-parking Slippers And Intelligent Furniture

WATCH: 'Smart' Japanese Hotel Opens Offering Guests Self-parking Slippers And Intelligent Furniture
In Japan, where old traditions are constantly being updated with new technology, one inn is making use of automated driving technology to offer the latest in hands-free hospitality -- self-driving slippers.

WATCH: 'Smart' Japanese Hotel Opens Offering Guests Self-parking Slippers And Intelligent Furniture

Dutch 'Fashion Police' To Confiscate Designer Clothes From People Who Look Too Poor To Afford Them

Dutch 'Fashion Police' To Confiscate Designer Clothes From People Who Look Too Poor To Afford Them
Police in the Dutch city of Rotterdam is rolling out a new and highly controversial pilot program aimed at reducing crime. 

Dutch 'Fashion Police' To Confiscate Designer Clothes From People Who Look Too Poor To Afford Them

Ultramarathon Runner Is Caught Winning Races By Hiding In Portable Toilets And Is Stripped Of Titles

Ultramarathon Runner Is Caught Winning Races By Hiding In Portable Toilets And Is Stripped Of Titles
Ultrarunner Kelly Agnew, 45, has been disgraced and stripped of his titles after an investigation by event officials revealed that he had hidden inside porta-pottys to win races.

Ultramarathon Runner Is Caught Winning Races By Hiding In Portable Toilets And Is Stripped Of Titles

Introducing the Sunion, an Onion That Doesn't Make You Cry When You Chop It

Introducing the Sunion, an Onion That Doesn't Make You Cry When You Chop It
Scientists and farmers have been working on a solution to this problem for decades, and they've apparently come up with a tearless onion.

Introducing the Sunion, an Onion That Doesn't Make You Cry When You Chop It

US Family Paid $250 For 'Professional Photoshoot' And This Is What They Got

US Family Paid $250 For 'Professional Photoshoot' And This Is What They Got
A Missouri family recently got a taste of internet stardom after sharing a series of hilariously bad "professional photograph" that they had paid just under $250 for. And the funniest thing is they consider it money well spent.

US Family Paid $250 For 'Professional Photoshoot' And This Is What They Got

Watch: Sister Sings 'You Are My Sunshine' To Brother With Down Syndrome In Viral Post

Watch: Sister Sings 'You Are My Sunshine' To Brother With Down Syndrome In Viral Post
The touching video shows the children elated, especially two-year-old Bo, who flaunts his newly learnt words like 'happy' and 'you' every time the chorus is sung. 

Watch: Sister Sings 'You Are My Sunshine' To Brother With Down Syndrome In Viral Post