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Primula pulverulenta
The candelabra primulas (the Proliferae section) are wonderful plants, originating from China and the Himalaya, for woodland or damp, even extremely wet, places. They make clumps of strong leaves, deciduous in some species and persisting through the winter in others, and then send up their tall stems. At intervals up the stems there are whorls of ten or so flowers, each ring opening in succession, perhaps one every five or six days, . As there can be up to six, even seven, whorls, that gives an exceptional flowering period. So there can be a mass of colour – and that colour can be brilliant orange or yellow, red, pink, white, even dark maroon. Primula pulverulenta has up to about six whorls of deep pink flowers with an even deeper maroon eye, opening in succession up the flower stems. The stems and leaves are coated with creamy-white flour ('farina'). The rosettes of leaves die down in the winter.
PLANT SPECIFICS |
Pot Size |
1 litre pot |
Width |
25cm |
Height |
80cm |
Family |
Primulaceae |
Flowering |
Late spring to early summer |
Garden habitat |
partial shade |
Soil |
fertile, well drained soil |
Plant category |
Herbaceous |
Height range |
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Code |
PPN-1 |
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