The Foxglove. British native. Wayne Ramshaw.
Foxgloves quickly form colourful clumps to liven up areas of light shade, attracting masses of bees. The common name has nothing to do with foxes. It's a corruption of the phrase 'folks' gloves' - fairy folk were said to use flowers as gloves. The Latin, digitalis, refers to the flowers' finger- or digit-like shape. Besides buying or sowing the seed of a particular kind of foxglove, also buy a packet of mixed seed, to give all kinds of colours. But note that most foxgloves are biennials, which means you sow the seed one year; they flower, die and scatter seed the next. Also be aware that all parts of the plant are highly toxic if eaten, but handling them isn't a problem. Digitalis purpurea: the only British native is the biggest and best, capable of reaching (6ft) high. It has soft, felt-like leaves and a strong stem that can carry hundreds of tubular flowers. The buds are white; the flowers a rich, rosy purple with lovely speckles and clusters of short hairs in the throat. A biennial or short-lived perennial, it's best grown annually. D. purpurea, Excelsior Group, has a wide range of pastel-coloured flowers that grow all around the stem, rather than only up one side. D. purpurea, Foxy Group, is much more compact and seldom exceeds 75cm () high. D. purpurea, subsp. heywoodii, meanwhile, is a wild subspecies with silvery leaves and ivory flowers. D. purpurea, Giant Spotted Group, is much more eye-catching, because of large blotches of dark purple in the flowers' throats. All are best grown annually. D. grandiflora, closely resembling D. purpurea, has deep cream-coloured flowers whose throats are streaked with distinctive rusty markings. It's biennial or perennial. This plant been given the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. D. laevigata: in midsummer it produces spires of brownish-yellow flowers with a white lower lip and speckled interior. It's perennial. D. lutea: a choice foxglove with slender stems of pale-yellow flowers.
Size: 3750px × 5000px
Location: Washington, Tyne and Wear. Wildlife and Wetlands Trust.
Photo credit: © Wayne Ramshaw / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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