Showing posts with label foxgloves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foxgloves. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2012

Seeding foxgloves in the fall

During a hike this summer, I happened across a woodland clearing scattered with common foxglove (Digitalis purpurea). The bright fuchsia shafts towered above yellow-flowering field.  

 
What a great addition to the mellow yellow foxglove (Digitalis grandiflora) that happily inhabits a shady corner of the yard, I thought.  


In the past, I've tried, without success, to grow "Apricot Beauty," another Digitalis purpurea cultivar.  Perhaps this wild pink version will be more robust than its finicky cousin.

 
Late November is a good time for winter sowing in New England. Preparations are pretty basic: dig some composted cow manure into a bare patch next to the existing foxgloves, remove the glass jar of seeds from the refrigerator, and scatter seeds over the turned soil. The seeds are very tiny, so surface sowing seemed the best way to go.  



Hopefully, by next summer these garish-colored blooms will evoke memories of hikes in the mountains.  Or, at least, an excuse to relax in the garden with a glass of Riesling and wedge of Munster cheese.

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

Foxgloves

Foxgloves are blooming.  I can't quite figure out how these plants "work."  All I know is that the flashy peach and raspberry cultivars championed by fancy nurseries can't hack our harsh New England winters.  But the common yellow foxglove (Digitalis ambigua)--demure in habit, presentation, and color--does just fine.  It isn't much of an attention-seeker, but it does spark up a dark back corner of the garden.




Care consists entirely of cutting the flower stalks down after they are spent.  The plants themselves move around, bumping up against columbines and anemones, but never elbowing them aside or squeezing them out. A little like a polite but slightly tipsy guest. A big bed of roaming foxgloves, still bounded by this green and yellow hosta, would be quite wonderful.  And maybe they could get really crazy out there!