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01/09/2025
Dahlia tubers are like people: they come in a wide range of sizes, from small, narrow, slightly wrinkled ones, to big, round, plump ones.
It can be a shock for new Dahlia growers to compare two varieties: the smaller one looks like a reject compared to the bigger one!
This diversity is natural, and in many cases, a variety with the smaller tubers grows into a bigger plant with bigger flowers than a variety with large tubers.
A wrinkled, shrivelled looking dahlia tuber is natural and normal for many varieties, and perfectly good to plant if it is firm.
If the tuber is soft, even if it’s not shrivelled, then it’s almost certainly rotten, diseased, or too old to grow well, and should be discarded.
If you receive soft tubers from us, please Contact Us for a replacement.
A dahlia tuber consists of three main parts, colour-coded for you:
(Images courtesy of Summer Dreams Farm in Michigan, USA, from their excellent Dahlia Tuber Splitting Guide)
From top to bottom:
Therefore:
Eyes are the most important part of the dahlia: they are the buds that produce all the leaves and flowers.
The eye will only be on the crown end, on top of the neck, never anywhere else on the tuber body. Dahlias are not like potato tubers in that sense, which can have eyes anywhere on the tuber body.
They become obvious when they begin to swell and break, but on a dormant tuber they are still quite easy to spot, rather like a wart:
This is an eye sprouting, with the black line marking the point where the neck ends, and the crown begins; if you were to cut the tuber there, the eye would still grow, but slowly.
Don’t worry! Here is what happens when a shoot is broken off; you can see the round scar in the centre of the image. The eye grows a new shoot right away.
(Photo used with permission from Clara Joyce Flowers.)
Below, you can see the crown meets the necks of the tubers. If you were to cut off all the necks and tubers, the remaining crown would still grow shoots, and recover with new tubers for the following year.
This means that if your Dahlia got a knock in transit and has a tuber or two hanging by thread if not clean off, you always plant the crown with its remaining tubers as normal. You won’t see a noticeable difference in size or flowering in the first year.
Inspect a broken off tuber for a piece of crown on top with an eye: most tubers break off without one, but not all.