GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/)
-   -   Foxgloves (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/66727-foxgloves.html)

Mariot 19-06-2004 04:04 PM

Foxgloves
 
One of my foxgloves has a single large flower at the top of the spike like a single rose. The rest of the flower spike is normal. Is this something abnormal or has anyone seen it before?

Gary 20-06-2004 09:02 PM

Foxgloves
 
I planted two foxglove plants about 3-4 years ago. Every year they
bloom, but the blooms are very small and unremarkable - not at all
like the pictures one sees of foxglove stalks covered with large
bell-shaped blossoms. Does anyone know if what I got was just a
variety that produces small blooms, or should I be doing something
different to encourage larger blooms. The plants seem happy and
healthy where they are in a shady spot under a tree, just little
bloomers!
Thanks for any info you might have,
Gary

Paul Below 20-06-2004 09:42 PM

Foxgloves
 
On 20 Jun 2004 12:33:29 -0700, (Gary) wrote:

Does anyone know if what I got was just a
variety that produces small blooms, or should I be doing something
different to encourage larger blooms.


Not sure, but the Foxgloves in our yard grow larger if they are
growing in compost.



paghat 21-06-2004 02:02 AM

Foxgloves
 
Here are a couple of guesses, though the thing that puzzles me a bit is
your saying your stunted foxglove has unimpressive flowers. There IS a
dwarf foxglove, namely Digitalis obscura, but but even being fall smaller,
the blooms ARE quite showy even though the plant is very small compared to
our native Foxglove. Here's a page about it:
http://www.paghat.com/digitalisobscura.html
The large foxgloves are biennials & unless they are self-seeding, your
statement that they've been small & unimpressive for "years" suggests it
just isn't the species you thought. D. obscura by comparison lives for
several years.

Yet another dwarf foxglove is Digitalis dubia, but this one looks much
more greatly like the full-sized Digitalis purpuraea, merely scaled down
to an eency size. It's showy as the all get-out despite its tininess.

You may just have the plant misidentified altogether. Penstemons can
sometimes look rather like foxgloves, but never as showy; one species is
even named for the resemblance, Penstemon digitalis, but all the other
species also have thimble or bellshaped blooms. Penstemons have extremely
pleasing flowers but if one expected foxgloves, they might look shrunken &
unimpressive by comparison, plus penstemons can "wear out" in time, or in
stressful conditions, & thus produce fewer & much less impressive flowers,
or the blooms might be very nice but get lost in an excess of foliage.

It might help to know the color of yours. D. obscura would be yellow or
bronze; D. dubia would be the same bright rosey color of large biennial
foxgloves, Penstemon digitalis would most likely be white to very pale
pink, but penstemons in general come in all sorts of colors.

-paghat the ratgirl

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
Visit the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com

Vox Humana 21-06-2004 05:07 AM

Foxgloves
 

"paghat" wrote in message
...
Here are a couple of guesses, though the thing that puzzles me a bit is
your saying your stunted foxglove has unimpressive flowers. There IS a
dwarf foxglove, namely Digitalis obscura, but but even being fall smaller,
the blooms ARE quite showy even though the plant is very small compared to
our native Foxglove. Here's a page about it:
http://www.paghat.com/digitalisobscura.html
The large foxgloves are biennials & unless they are self-seeding, your
statement that they've been small & unimpressive for "years" suggests it
just isn't the species you thought. D. obscura by comparison lives for
several years.

Yet another dwarf foxglove is Digitalis dubia, but this one looks much
more greatly like the full-sized Digitalis purpuraea, merely scaled down
to an eency size. It's showy as the all get-out despite its tininess.

You may just have the plant misidentified altogether. Penstemons can
sometimes look rather like foxgloves, but never as showy; one species is
even named for the resemblance, Penstemon digitalis, but all the other
species also have thimble or bellshaped blooms. Penstemons have extremely
pleasing flowers but if one expected foxgloves, they might look shrunken &
unimpressive by comparison, plus penstemons can "wear out" in time, or in
stressful conditions, & thus produce fewer & much less impressive flowers,
or the blooms might be very nice but get lost in an excess of foliage.

It might help to know the color of yours. D. obscura would be yellow or
bronze; D. dubia would be the same bright rosey color of large biennial
foxgloves, Penstemon digitalis would most likely be white to very pale
pink, but penstemons in general come in all sorts of colors.

-paghat the ratgirl


I have digitalis ambigua. It is rather small and the flower are an ivory
color. It is very reliable and I have seen it listed as a true perennial
foxglove The plant never gets more than about 12 inches for me and has just
started to self sow after about 6 years. It tends to be semi-evergreen in
my zone 6 garden. Here is a picture from a few years ago.
http://groups.msn.com/laurelridgegar...to&PhotoID=340



Gary 26-06-2004 01:05 AM

Foxgloves
 
"Vox Humana" wrote in message ...
"paghat" wrote in message
...
Here are a couple of guesses, though the thing that puzzles me a bit is
your saying your stunted foxglove has unimpressive flowers. There IS a
dwarf foxglove, namely Digitalis obscura, but but even being fall smaller,
the blooms ARE quite showy even though the plant is very small compared to
our native Foxglove. Here's a page about it:
http://www.paghat.com/digitalisobscura.html
The large foxgloves are biennials & unless they are self-seeding, your
statement that they've been small & unimpressive for "years" suggests it
just isn't the species you thought. D. obscura by comparison lives for
several years.

Yet another dwarf foxglove is Digitalis dubia, but this one looks much
more greatly like the full-sized Digitalis purpuraea, merely scaled down
to an eency size. It's showy as the all get-out despite its tininess.

You may just have the plant misidentified altogether. Penstemons can
sometimes look rather like foxgloves, but never as showy; one species is
even named for the resemblance, Penstemon digitalis, but all the other
species also have thimble or bellshaped blooms. Penstemons have extremely
pleasing flowers but if one expected foxgloves, they might look shrunken &
unimpressive by comparison, plus penstemons can "wear out" in time, or in
stressful conditions, & thus produce fewer & much less impressive flowers,
or the blooms might be very nice but get lost in an excess of foliage.

It might help to know the color of yours. D. obscura would be yellow or
bronze; D. dubia would be the same bright rosey color of large biennial
foxgloves, Penstemon digitalis would most likely be white to very pale
pink, but penstemons in general come in all sorts of colors.

-paghat the ratgirl


I have digitalis ambigua. It is rather small and the flower are an ivory
color. It is very reliable and I have seen it listed as a true perennial
foxglove The plant never gets more than about 12 inches for me and has just
started to self sow after about 6 years. It tends to be semi-evergreen in
my zone 6 garden. Here is a picture from a few years ago.
http://groups.msn.com/laurelridgegar...to&PhotoID=340


Thanks, everyone, for your responses to my question - and my apologies
for not acknowledging sooner. You know, life gets busy, etc. - still
no excuse. Sorry.
I'm still not sure what kind of foxglove I have. It appears to be a
perennial variety, rather than one that re-seeds itself. Or possibly,
I have a plant that was incorrectly labeled at the nursery where I
bought it.
Paghat - Your website is WONDERFUL! Thanks!
Gary


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:01 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter