Fritillaria meleagris
Liliaceae
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Habitat:
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meadows
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Flowering:
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spring
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Size:
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15
x
30
(w x h cm) |
Soil:
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good garden soil
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Fritillaria meleagris flower
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Price
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£3.50
(5 bulbs)
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Order code:
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FMX-5B
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Plants for those who like unusual, often subdued, colours and patterns. There is an almost endless variety of Fritillaria species, some of them widely available and others very difficult to come by. Many of them need a dry spell in summer, so they are best grown in gritty soil in pots, kept dry after the foliage dies down, until they are repotted in late summer and given a good watering - the September 'thunderstorm' treatment. Others are perfectly happy outside.
Fritillaria meleagris is the snake's head fritillary, a rare but much loved British native. It has solitary (occasionally paired), broadly bell-shaped, purple, pinkish-purple and white chequered flowers. It can easily be naturalised in grass, or allowed to form clumps in borders, or grown in a pot.
Other related plants:
Unusual form with pale lemon yellow flowers over dark, glossy foliage.
Broad, glaucous leaves and one or two plum-coloured hanging bells.
Narrow plum-coloured bells with yellow/green bands.
White-flowered form of the snake?s-head fritillary, lightly chequered.
Dark purple bell-shaped flowers with yellow band at the mouth.
Dark, chocolate brown flowers.
Unusual early fritillary, with creamy flowers with dark markings at the base.
Flowers are open, hanging cups, creamy white, with many green spots.
Bell-shaped, pendant maroon flowers with pale greenish-yellow tips.