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Campanula latifolia var. macrantha
Bellflowers can be grown just about anywhere, from rock gardens to woodland areas. The colour range runs from mostly blue, with a scattering of white and the occasional pink. They make good feature plants or backgrounds for roses.
Before buying a bellflower, do check its requirements. They can be grown in various positions.
These come in various shades of blue and can be used as part of quiet, pastel schemes or to offset star performers in brighter, richer colours.
C. lactiflora C. lactiflora : the flowers of the milky bellflower appear as frothy heads above the tall branched stems which can reach 1.5m (5ft) high in good, rich soil. It has produced many forms, the best being 'Loddon Anna', 'Prichard's Variety' and 'Superba'. All three cultivars have been given the Award of Garden Merit (AGM) by the The Royal Horticultural Society.
There are many bellflowers for the wild garden, one of the best being C. latifolia .
C. rotundifolia C. rotundifolia : the harebell (called the bluebell in Scotland) is perhaps the most familiar native campanula. Its dainty sky-blue thimbles nod on thin wiry stems in late summer and early autumn. A vigorous spreader, definitely not for tidy, formal borders.
There are several campanulas that can be grown in small city gardens which don't spread so vigorously.
C. 'Gloaming' C . 'Gloaming': it has a limited spread and a gentle show of smoky blue flowers.
Many small campanulas can be grown in containers (traditionally old sinks filled with free-draining soil), which are then placed in bright sun.
Site and soil preferences: with a few exceptions, campanulas are reliable perennials requiring no special care, just a bright, sunny position and free-draining soil.
Division: It is worth digging up and dividing the clumps every few years, throwing away the tired old central parts and replanting the outer, younger, more vigorous sections.
Planting associations The large bells of the blue and white forms of C. persicifolia , displayed on elegant waist-high stems, contrast perfectly with the velvety crimson blooms of old roses, such as Rosa 'Charles de Mills'. C . 'Kent Belle' looks very effective flopping over spiky grasses, and the pastel pink C . 'Loddon Anna' is highly effective rising above the purple foliage of heuchera.
Keep a look out for marauding slugs and snails which can chew through the stems. Otherwise bellflowers are quite robust.
National Collections of Campanulas:
S Cunliffe-Lister Burton Agnes Hall Driffield East Yorkshire YO25 4NB Tel: 01262 490 324 Opening Times: Call for details
S Wooster , c/o NCCPG Suffolk Tel:07879 644958 Website: www.alpinecampanulas.co.uk Opening Times: By appointment only
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