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Polygonatum x hybridum
Solomon's seal is a well-known garden plant, but the genus covers a wider range of plants. The familiar ones have arching stems, perhaps a metre tall, with opposite pairs of leaves and a pair of flowers hanging from each each leaf axil. There are many variations on this theme, but less well known are some elegant plants, much smaller, some with quite deep pink flowers. There are also a few really dwarf alpines, in which the pink flowers emerge flat on the ground, and when a colony is in flower it looks like fallen cherry blossom. Heteropolygonatum is a very closely related genus, separated on technical grounds. Polygonatum x hybridum is the garden Solomon's seal, also sometimes known as David's harp. It makes a clump of the usual tall arching stems, with two tubular white bells hanging beside each pair of leaves. It is a hybrid of Polygonatum multiflorum (the common Solomon's seal) and P. odoratum, the angular Solomon's seal.
PLANT SPECIFICS |
Pot Size |
1 litre pot |
Width |
30cm |
Height |
1.2m |
Family |
Asparagaceae |
Flowering |
Late spring |
Garden habitat |
partial shade |
Soil |
fertile, moist soil |
Plant category |
Herbaceous |
Height |
1.2 m |
Code |
QHX-1 |
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J |
F |
M |
A |
M |
J |
J |
A |
S |
O |
N |
D |
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FLOWERING |
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