Plant
AQUILEGIA
or Granny's Bonnets
Extravagant ornaments in every colour and style
From delicate nodding bells of white or blue to flambouyant artworks that seem to exist beyond nature.
This archetypal cottage garden plant takes up little room but demands your attention.

Colours
All including exotic intricate bi-colours

Height; spread
15cm - 1m tall; 20 - 50 cm spread

Conditions
Moist loam or in woodland

Sun or shade
Full shade or partial shade

Flowers
May to July

Propagation
By seed or division
Reasons to grow...
- Almost too exquisite to be natural
- Every imaginable colour, from the pure blue common form to flamboyant bi-colour combinations
- Take up little room and can be squeezed in where most perennials can’t
- Easy to propagate and promiscuous seeders
- Delicate tapestry of open foliage
Watch out for
Aquilegia sawfly
Aquilegia gall midge – grows in flower buds
Some self-seeding concoctions aren’t garden-worthy
Garden Rooms
Back Terrace
Some of the earliest flowering Aquilegias are in this bed.
The White Garden
Frilly white bells seed around but we let them stay.
Whitebeam Allee
Recently added to pop up behind and through the catmint
Top Varieties
McKana’s Hybrid – long-spurred variety in a wide number of combinations
Nora Barlow – a series with fluffy blooms, most striking in black
Vulgaris – the common variety but an enchanting deep blue
We brought white seeds and a mix of McKana’s long-spurred varieties and have ended up with a wonderful variety of cross-bred mongrels – like the one pictured here. We’re never sure what to expect and have had some brilliant surprises.
