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Crocus versicolor Picturatus

Crocus versicolor Picturatus

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Very beautiful!!!

Emmanuel, 25/02/2023

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

This crocus is a beautiful form with pure white flowers striped with mauve. It comes from a botanical species. This small bulbous plant blooms from February and proves to be easy to grow in the sun or partial shade, in any well-drained, even chalky and poor soil. It will naturalise in borders and rockeries.  
Flower size
3 cm
Height at maturity
12 cm
Spread at maturity
10 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -23°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil, Moist soil
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Best planting time September to October
Recommended planting time January, September to December
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Flowering time February to March
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Description

Crocus versicolor 'Picturatus' is a delightful form with pure white flowers striped with mauve. It comes from a botanical species called the variegated crocus or changing crocus. This small bulbous plant blooms from February in favourable climates, and in March elsewhere. It is one of the easiest species to cultivate and naturalise in lawns, flower beds, and rockeries. It will grow in limestone and poor soil. It tolerates moist soils better than other botanical crocuses in summer.

 

Crocus versicolor, also known as Crest Crocus, belongs to the Iridaceae family. It originates from the southeast of France. It grows in limestone soils, on sunny hillsides, and in low-altitude pastures. This prolific crocus forms large colonies in upright clumps measuring 10 to 15cm (4 to 6in) in height. It has a rapid growth rate. Flowering occurs from February to March.

'Picturatus' bears delicate flowers, 2 to 3.5cm (1in) long. They are cup-shaped and open into a star-shaped flower. They are pure white on the inside. The exterior of the 3 outer petals is streaked with mauve-violet. The golden yellow flower heart is adorned with yellow-orange stamens grouped in a 'tube', with a white base. The flowers close at night and in bad weather, opening in the sun and even in partial shade. The foliage is deciduous, composed of fine, thick, simple, and alternate linear leaves. They are medium green with a slightly grey, shiny, central white-silver band. The 'bulbs' here are corms. A corm is, in plant morphology, an underground storage organ that looks like a bulb but is formed by a swollen stem surrounded by scales.

 

Crocus versicolor 'Picturatus' works wonders in rockeries, when its flowering emerges from stones bleached by the sun, or when it adorns the edge of a sinuous path. It will also thrive on the edge of clear undergrowth, along a hedge, planted en masse at the base of deciduous trees (lilac, mock orange, viburnum) with Anemone blanda and Cyclamen coum, or in the middle of a lawn with winter aconites, snowdrops, or a carpet of violets, and of course, with other early-flowering crocuses. This variety is also suitable for outdoor pot planting. Perennial bloody cranesbills can also accompany it in borders: they will occupy the space when the crocus foliage has dried up in summer.

 

Crocus roots can contract like a spring, allowing the plant to settle at its ideal depth.

Crocus versicolor Picturatus in pictures

Crocus versicolor Picturatus (Flowering) Flowering
Crocus versicolor Picturatus (Plant habit) Plant habit

Plant habit

Height at maturity 12 cm
Spread at maturity 10 cm
Growth rate normal

Flowering

Flower colour white
Flowering time February to March
Inflorescence Solitary
Flower size 3 cm

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour dark green

Botanical data

Genus

Crocus

Species

versicolor

Cultivar

Picturatus

Family

Iridaceae

Origin

Mediterranean

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Planting and care

Plant the bulbs from September to December, in light soil, at a depth of 8cm (3in) and with a spacing of 5cm (2in), or in groups of three every 15 to 20cm (6 to 8in). It is preferable to leave them in place. They will form increasingly floriferous clumps. They also work well in pots on a patio. They grow in light, humus-bearing and well-drained, neutral to alkaline soils, and prefer a sunny exposure where the corollas will fully open. It is also important to protect them from cold winds. The ideal substrate should be sandy-gravelly with a pH between 8 and 10. It can tolerate temperatures as low as -29°C (-20.2°F) and summer drought. The plants have the best effect when planted in groups of 5 to 10 specimens. Once acclimatised and established, they multiply rapidly. Care should be taken not to cut the foliage before it turns yellow. Corms are susceptible to excess moisture, which can cause them to rot during their resting period. Rodents are fond of these corms, and snails and slugs feed on all aerial parts of the plant. 

Planting period

Best planting time September to October
Recommended planting time January, September to December
Planting depth 8 cm

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Rockery
Type of use Edge of border, Container, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -23°C (USDA zone 6a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 250 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil, well-drained, light

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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