![]() | Cantebury Bells medium Double MixedThis popular cottage garden plant has graced our gardens since 1596 and is imported from Spain. An excellent long-lasting cut flower. Try a few plants in a pot, for the conservatory or orangery, where they can grow protected. Beautiful! Sow this biennial directly in the ground and thin out or transplant. It is possible to pre-sow in a greenhouse and transplant later.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Forget me not sylvatica Indigo BlueA real spring bloomer. Cheers up the garden early in the year, popular with many women. Sow in the garden or seedbed. Sow thinly, and in late summer, once the plants are large enough, transplant to final spot. The earlier they can continue their growth in their final spot, the better they make it through summer. Combines well with bulbs.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Foxglove purpurea Excelsior mixedVariety with white, pink, rose and purple flowers, sometimes speckled. Flowering occurs from the bottom to the top of the flower stem. The tubular flowers are visited regularly by bees that completely disappear within the flower in their search for nectar. Prefers the semi-shade. Although a biennial, the plant often continues further if it is cut back soon after flowering.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Hollyhock Chater's Strain MixedOne of our oldest cultivated plants. A favourite due to its tall stems, and bell-shaped flowers with their fringed petals. A biennial plant whose flowers appear in the summer following the year of sowing. It has wonderful colours, including apricot, chestnut brown, pale yellow and cream variations. Sow in a seedbed, thin out and then later transplant.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Hollyhock rosea Nigra Jet BlackA very distinctive, almost black Hollyhock. Jet Black has long flower stalks with numerous silky brownish-black single flowers. A biennial that flowers in the following year. Hollyhocks have "something" light-hearted and nonchalant. They grow tall, but remain decorative. Sow in the garden in a seedbed, thin out, then later transplant.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Money plant biennis annua Choice MixedAn old favourite. This biennial used to grace every garden and is still popular due to its decorative seed capsules, which appear after the violet and white blooms. To enjoy as dried flower, hang upside down and allow to dry. A host plant for cabbage white butterflies and a honey plant for honey bees and bumblebees. Flowers in the 2nd year.Price: € 0,95+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Pansy cornuta Helen MountRichly blooming, small-flowered violets. The flowers are yellow with black stripes, which have dark patches towards the edges. The flowers of violets are edible. All violets are generally biennials, but the annual culture is recommended. Sow early in the spring, if necessary in an unheated greenhouse, prick out or transplant directly from the seedbed to the final spot. Those shaded yellow are biennials.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Pansy cornuta Hybr. AdmirationThe horned violet produces large, dark blue, round flowers. The flowers of violets are edible. All violets are generally biennials, but the annual culture is recommended. Sow early in the spring, if necessary in an unheated greenhouse, prick out or transplant directly from the seedbed to the final spot. Those shaded yellow are biennials.Price: € 1,95+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Pansy Swiss Giants AvondroodDark scarlet tints with clear, black patches. Also called Alpenglow. The flowers of pansies are edible. All pansies are generally biennials, but the annual culture is recommended. Sow early in the spring, if necessary in an unheated greenhouse, prick out or transplant directly from the seedbed to the final spot. Those shaded yellow are biennials.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |
![]() | Pansy Swiss Giants Choice MixedThe well-known large-flowered pansy variety with usually a large black patch in the centre of the flower. A mix with many velvety, warm colours. The flowers of pansies are edible. All pansies are generally biennials, but the annual culture is recommended. Sow early in the spring, if necessary in an unheated greenhouse, prick out or transplant directly from the seedbed to the final spot. Those shaded yellow are biennials.Price: € 1,50+ Add to cart » Read more |