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Digitalis purpurea Apricot - Foxglove

Digitalis purpurea Apricot
Common Foxglove, Purple Foxglove, Lady's Glove

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Disappointing

PATRICK B., 04/12/2017

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  1. 13
    €5.90 Seeds

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    €3.50 Seeds

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

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Value-for-money
This foxglove is a beautiful variety. This tall biennial (or perennial) produces magnificent inflorescences in spikes of a rare hue that is deeply nuanced with apricot. They bloom above a deep green rosette of sturdy ovate leaves. These plants colonise woodlands, and thrive in humus-rich and well-drained soils.
Flower size
4 cm
Height at maturity
1.40 m
Exposure
Partial shade
Annual / Perennial
Perennial
Germination time (days)
21 days
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Sowing period February to May
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Flowering time June to September
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M
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Description

Digitalis purpurea 'Apricot' is a beautiful variety. This hardy biennial produces magnificent spike-like inflorescences in a rare shade of deep apricot-tinged beige. They bloom above a deep green rosette of sturdy ovate leaves. These plants are found in open woodlands, colonising well-drained, humus-bearing soils. It is usually grown as a biennial, but it is perennial if the flowers are pruned before seed formation. 

 

'Apricot' is a cultivar derived from Digitalis purpurea, a plant in the Plantaginaceae family. It is a biennial herbaceous plant that can become perennial, developing a 45cm (18in) diameter rosette in spring. The leaves are dark green, crenate-dentate, and covered in slightly woolly, light-coloured hairs. The underside of the leaves is networked and wrinkled. In May-June of the second year, up to 5 hollow but sturdy stems emerge from the rosette, reaching a height of 1.4m (5ft). They bear a dense flowering spike composed of numerous tightly packed tubular flowers that open from bottom to top. Each bell-shaped flower attracts a ballet of bees and bumblebees, tirelessly collecting nectar and pollen. The colour is rare and particularly captivating. It is a beautiful beige-tinged pink, washed with apricot, and speckled and punctuated with purple.

 

Plant 'Apricot' in dappled sunlight or partial shade, in humus-rich and moist soil. It looks wonderful alongside old roses or perennials with single flowers, such as columbines, centaureas, astrantias, or meadow rues. This robust variety will flower for a long time in a large pot on a patio. This magnificent plant, as wild as it is romantic, also pairs well with perennial geraniums, heucheras, and the feathery foliage of ferns in light woodlands. Take advantage of this wonder by creating sumptuous bouquets for your home.

 

Attention! The seeds are reserved for highly experienced gardeners accustomed to sowing very fine seeds. These seeds are as fine as dust and barely visible to the naked eye.

 

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time June to September
Inflorescence Cluster
Flower size 4 cm
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour dark green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.40 m
Spread at maturity 60 cm
Growth rate normal

Safety measures

Potential risks Plant may be toxic if swallowed

Botanical data

Genus

Digitalis

Species

purpurea

Cultivar

Apricot

Family

Scophulariaceae

Other common names

Common Foxglove, Purple Foxglove, Lady's Glove

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Planting and care

Sow the seeds from January to May, on the surface of good, moist, well-draining compost. Lightly cover the seeds with vermiculite. Place in a mini-greenhouse or a polyethylene bag until the seeds germinate. Keep them at a temperature of 18 to 29°C (64.4 to 84.2°F). Keep the seedlings close to the light, as this facilitates germination. Germination usually takes 14 to 30 days. Transplant the plants when they are large enough to handle into 8cm (3in) diameter trays or pots. Gradually acclimatise the plants to cooler conditions for a few weeks before planting them after all risk of frost has passed. Space them 45 to 60cm (18 to 24in) apart. Foxgloves grown from early sowings may sometimes flower in their first year.

Purple foxgloves and their varieties prefer partial shade and acidic, loose, humus-rich soil that is not too rich. They are very hardy plants, but their lifespan is quite short. They self-seed abundantly in the garden, but the resulting plants are rarely identical to the parent plants when it comes to horticultural selections.

Sowing period

Sowing period February to May
Germination time (days) 21 days

Intended location

Suitable for Woodland edge, Undergrowth
Type of use Border, Back of border, Container
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Exposure Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil moisture Moist soil, Well-draining, rich, humus-bearing.
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