January 24, 2012 – 7:53 pm | 5 Comments

What are some plants with green flowers?

Read the full story »

Create Your Dream GardenCreate Your Dream Garden

Sign up for Horticulture's weekly Smart Gardening eNewsletter and get a FREE six-month subscription to
Garden Logic's online garden design program!

Horticulture

SAVE 58%


 Current Issue »
Weekly Tips

Get Smart Gardening tips and advice right here, right now.

Plants

Grow edibles and ornamentals successfully—here's how.

Regions

Find region-specific gardening info here.

Gardening Blogs

Connect with Team Horticulture and The Landless Gardener.

Gardens/Gardeners

Visit private gardens and meet the gardeners who grow them.

Home » Plants We Love

Plants We Love: Foxgloves

Submitted by on May 5, 2009 – 12:05 amNo Comment

Plant name: Foxglove

Botanical name: Digitalis species and cultivars

Virtues:
Fairly easy to grow plants that bloom in dramatic spikes of tubular bell-shaped flowers. Most foxgloves are biennials (forming leaves the first year and flowers the second) that reseed, creating a perpetual self-sown display.

Flowers: Tubular, bell-shaped, slightly downward-facing flowers are held densely on upright stems. They can be white, yellow, pink, purple or blue and are often dotted on the inside.

Foliage: Medium green leaves form rosettes near ground level in its first year. Smaller leaves line the flower stalks that appear the second year.

Habit: Rosette-forming with an upright flowering stem.

Season: Flowers appear in summer, early, mid or late depending on the species, in the second year from germination.

Origin: Europe, northwest Africa, central Asia.

Cultivation:
Foxgloves tolerate nearly any type of soil, except the very wet or very dry. They also tolerate a range of sun exposure, though most species prefer partial shade. These biennials will often scatter their own seed at the end of the growing season. If you do not want seedlings the next year, remove the flowers before seeds are set. All parts of foxgloves (Digitalis) are poisonous if ingested, and their foliage can irritate the skin. USDA Zones 3–10, depending on species.

Read more about biennial flowers

Read more Plants We Love
 

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.