SKU: 29278924325
planting lychnis seeds

planting lychnis seeds Rose Campion Seeds | Lychnis coronaria

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Description

planting lychnis seeds Rose Campion Seeds | Lychnis coronariaLychnis coronaria Rose Campion Mullein Pink Bridal Wort Tall branched silvery grey stems topped with intense neon bright magenta pink single flowers, rising above an exceptionally beautiful basal rosette of soft woolly silver grey foliage that feels like felt to the touch Rose Campion is the RHS Award of Garden Merit cottage perennial that combines two genuinely beautiful features (the silver foliage and the saturated magenta) that could not be more

Lychnis coronaria Rose Campion / Mullein Pink / Bridal Wort

Tall branched silvery-grey stems topped with intense neon-bright magenta-pink single flowers, rising above an exceptionally beautiful basal rosette of soft woolly silver-grey foliage that feels like felt to the touch — Rose Campion is the RHS Award of Garden Merit cottage perennial that combines two genuinely beautiful features (the silver foliage and the saturated magenta) that could not be more different from each other, and whose contrast is the whole point.

Rose Campion offers a combination rare in the plant kingdom: genuinely beautiful foliage and genuinely beautiful flowers that look as if they shouldn't belong on the same plant. The leaves and stems are thickly covered in soft woolly silver-grey hairs that feel exactly like felt or lambs' ears — silvery-white in appearance, creating a ghostly almost-frosted quality in the border throughout the year, including winter when most other perennials have disappeared entirely. Against this silver background, the flowers arrive in summer: small (approximately 3–4cm across), five-petalled, flat, and in a shade of magenta-pink that's genuinely "neon-bright" — specifically intense and saturated, appearing to glow against the pale stems in a way that neither pink nor red alone can achieve. Hardy perennial (H7), often biennial in behaviour — typically lives 2–3 years individually but a prolific self-seeder that creates permanent renewing colonies. RHS Award of Garden Merit AND RHS Plants for Pollinators.

The garden philosophy: Rose Campion rewards a specific approach — grow it for the colony it becomes rather than the individual plant it starts as. The first year's silver rosette establishes the foliage; the second year's flowering begins the colony; by the third year, self-seeded plants are appearing around the parent and the silver-and-magenta combination has built itself into a quietly-spreading permanent feature.

A note on growing

Surface-sow indoors February–April or direct outdoors May–July. Press seeds into moist compost without burying — Rose Campion needs light to germinate. Germination 14–21 days.

Plant out in full sun in well-drained soil. Lychnis coronaria genuinely prefers lean conditions and resents heavy waterlogged ground (which is the primary cause of plant loss). Gravel gardens and dry sunny banks suit it perfectly. Allow it to self-seed freely from year one — this is the entire strategy for establishing a Rose Campion colony.

Deadhead spent flowers to extend the season, but leave some flower stems to set seed every year if you want the colony to expand. Run a hand over the silver-grey woolly rosette in January, because it's still there — Rose Campion is one of the few perennials providing genuine winter foliage interest.

Where it shines

In hot dry sunny borders where the drought-tolerance suits the conditions. As a "silver-and-magenta" focal feature in cottage borders — the colour combination of silver leaves and neon flowers is genuinely unique in the cottage perennial range. In gravel gardens and Mediterranean-style plantings. In winter gardens for the silver-grey rosette interest when nothing else is flowering. As a self-seeding informal colony plant that establishes itself naturally over years. In wildlife gardens for the high bumblebee and butterfly value.

Plant alongside

The classic cottage colour combinations: pair Rose Campion with dark purple companions like Hesperis 'Purple' or Cornflower 'Black Ball' — the neon magenta against deep purple is genuinely electric. For complementary cottage colour, combine with Malva 'Mystic Merlin' (matching purple-and-silver palette at greater height). With Geum 'Mrs Bradshaw' (matching warm tones with contrasting habit) and Achillea 'Cerise Queen' for a hot cottage scheme. With Cosmos 'Purity' for the classic silver-and-white-and-magenta cottage trio.

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SKU: 29278924325

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Mainer
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
My pick for Best YA from 2015
Format: Kindle
I don't usually like Westerns, but this historical novel reads like a racially diverse Little House on the Prairie. There's a touch of romance, but the most important relationship is the friendship between these two resourceful girls. The writing is superb with well developed characters, a fast pace and a fine sense of place and period (1849). Despite dealing with tough issues like murder, slavery and racism, it still manages to be a feel good story, appropriate for tweens as well as teens. The girl protagonists are 15 and 16 and the boys are a bit older. This debut tops my list of best YA from 2015 that I've read to date: http://blog.sarahlaurence.com/2015/12/best-ya-books-of-2015.html
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Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2015
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Madeline M
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 3
Nice
Format: Kindle
There is some attempted sexual violence. Otherwise this is a good book for middle and high schoolers. Story of a Chinese American and African American girl on the run in the wild wild west.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2019
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Kristy
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
... into YA Westerns and I have yet to be disappointed. Under a Painted Sky is a diverse
Format: Hardcover
Over the past year I have made a foray into YA Westerns and I have yet to be disappointed. Under a Painted Sky is a diverse, cultural infused tale of two girls, Our main character, Sam a Chinese, newly orphaned girl, teams up with Annamae (Andy), an African-America, runaway slave. Together they flee St. Joe, Missouri disguised as boys and begin on the Oregon Trail. They soon join three cowboys who help keep them safe and teach them how to survive. I think what I loved most about this book is how Lee was able to incorporate Sam's Chinese heritage and beliefs along with Andy's and intertwine all it beautifully into this richly told story. Sam's and Andy's friendship was also a highlight of the book. It caused for some great moments, some funny, many heartfelt, and I was glad to see such a positive example of female friendship in a YA novel. Although "girl disguised as boy" seem to be a common theme in YA westerns I did not mind it here and thought Sam's inner thoughts about the challenges of pretending to be a boy were hilarious. I think Lee struck the perfect balance between an adventure story, a coming of age tale, and portrait of what life could be like for minorities and females in the 1800s
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Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2016
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Pamela
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
A great BeeHive Award Winner!
Format: Kindle
This is a BeeHive Award winner for young adults! What a great read! It is a page turner, that's for sure. Two runaways--a slave and a Chinese girl--take to the trail West during the big Gold Rush. They meet up and join three young men traveling West to seek their fortunes. The catch? The girls are disguised as "boys!" The adventures begin! Fast paced book. Highly recommend it for young adults, but I really enjoyed it, too. Written well and in all situations, the characters were believable! I did make some predictions that, in fact, came true. Didn't ruin the story for me at all--only heightened my anticipation! Great read!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2016
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AFSC
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
I absolutely loved everything about this story
Format: Kindle
I absolutely loved everything about this story. At first I was unsure of the time period, I've never been a huge western fan, but I'm so glad I picked this up. Not only were the historical details interesting, but the characters were timeless. Sammy was such a beautiful, courageous, complex main character, I couldn't help but root for her. The memories of her father and her connection to him through music was heartbreaking, and her heritage touched every facet of her life on the run. The family she formed with the cowboys and Andy was so genuine and real, and made me laugh in unexpected places. The action was fast paced and something was always happening, so it was hard to put down. Highly recommend this story for anyone who's a fan of adventure, strong female relationships, and romance. A++
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Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2015

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