Digitalis trojana
Plantaginaceae
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Habitat:
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full sun or part shade
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Flowering:
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late spring to early summer
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Size:
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30
x
100
(w x h cm) |
Soil:
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any good garden soil
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Price
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£3.00
(9 cm pot)
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Order code:
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DTQ-9
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Foxgloves are well known and well loved, with their spires of distinctive tubular flowers. The common wild plant in Britain is Digitalis purpurea, whose flowers we used to place on all our fingers when we were children (whence the name Digitalis). Such things are frowned on nowadays, as all parts of the plants are toxic. This species is a biennial, but many are perennial, living in gardens for many years, and they come in a range of colours, some with amazing multicoloured flowers, not brilliant colours, but elegant and refined.
Digitalis trojana is a rare foxglove species from Turkey. It has unusual caramel-brown flowers which have a white lip and a patterned gold and rust-brown throat. The unopened flower spikes are silvery grey. It will readily self-seed under suitable conditions.
Other related plants:
Perennial foxglove with creamy-white, red-striped flowers.
Spires packed with pale yellow flowers.
Creamy coloured flowers with violet-brown markings.
Dense spikes of deep orange-brown flowers.
White-flowered form of our foxglove, with tall spires of tubular flowers.