
Foxglove - White
Tall spires of pendulous bell-shaped flowers bloom from late spring to summer. They were described in 1903 by garden writer Helena Rutherfurd Ely as "...the pride of the garden. Plant them back of the Sweet Williams, in clumps of six or eight, or else with peonies. They blossom at the same time, and the pinks or reds of Sweet Williams or Peonies, ...and the tall, graceful spikes of the Foxgloves rising above them, produce so beautiful an effect that you will have to go and look at them many times a day." When grown mingled with the purple kind, self-sown seedlings can produce soft pink flowers.
Foxglove - White
Tall spires of pendulous bell-shaped flowers bloom from late spring to summer. They were described in 1903 by garden writer Helena Rutherfurd Ely as "...the pride of the garden. Plant them back of the Sweet Williams, in clumps of six or eight, or else with peonies. They blossom at the same time, and the pinks or reds of Sweet Williams or Peonies, ...and the tall, graceful spikes of the Foxgloves rising above them, produce so beautiful an effect that you will have to go and look at them many times a day." When grown mingled with the purple kind, self-sown seedlings can produce soft pink flowers.
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Description
Tall spires of pendulous bell-shaped flowers bloom from late spring to summer. They were described in 1903 by garden writer Helena Rutherfurd Ely as "...the pride of the garden. Plant them back of the Sweet Williams, in clumps of six or eight, or else with peonies. They blossom at the same time, and the pinks or reds of Sweet Williams or Peonies, ...and the tall, graceful spikes of the Foxgloves rising above them, produce so beautiful an effect that you will have to go and look at them many times a day." When grown mingled with the purple kind, self-sown seedlings can produce soft pink flowers.
















