FLASH SALES: 20% off selected plants!
Share your pictures? Hide split images
I have read and agree the terms and conditions of service.

Centaurea montana Purple Heart

Centaurea montana Purple Heart
Perennial Cornflower, Great Blue-bottle, Mountain Bluet, Mountain Centaury

4,7/5
41 reviews
6 reviews
2 reviews
0 reviews
2 reviews

Dead at the end of this year's excessively damp Belgian winter.

Frédéric V., 20/05/2023

Leave a review → View all reviews →

Shipping country:

Select delivery date,

and select date in basket

This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

More information

Value-for-money
A lovely version of the robust perennial cornflower with bicoloured flowers.  Its white heads with purple centres, which bloom from spring to summer, don't go unnoticed in flowerbeds and alpine gardens. This hardy perennial enjoys sun and partial shade, an ordinary and well-drained soil, which is preferably moist.
Flower size
6 cm
Height at maturity
60 cm
Spread at maturity
40 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -34°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
plantfit-full

Would this plant suit my garden?

Set up your Plantfit profile →

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to May, August to October
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Flowering time April to June
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D

Description

Centaurea montana 'Purple Heart' is one of these new varieties of cornflower that revisit this robust perennial so widespread in gardens. Surprisingly vibrant but with a real elegance, the flowers of 'Purple Heart' display a beautifully highlighted violet-purple centre, surrounded by peripheral petals like white trumpets, glazed with a blue candy hue at their tips. The reputation of the mountain cornflower is well established: it grows everywhere, in heavy or light soils, in the sun or in the shade. It is making a strong comeback with new colours that are hard to resist!

 

Native to the mountains of Europe, Centaurea montana is a herbaceous perennial plant of the Asteraceae family that develops from trailing rhizomes. This medicinal and ornamental plant has been cultivated for a long time in all gardens where it self-seeds spontaneously. It is a plant that prefers calcareous and clay soil with a rocky tendency. Its deciduous foliage disappears in winter. 

The 'Purple Heart' cultivar, from which it originates, has identical foliage, pubescent, giving it a woolly appearance, especially on the underside of the leaves. It forms spreading clumps, up to 60 cm (24in) tall when in flower, 30 cm (12in) for the foliage, and 40 cm (16in) wide, or even more with age, as it spreads through its trailing rhizomes. Its leaves are 5 to 6 cm (2in) long, lanceolate in shape, with entire edges, and their colour is a green tinged with grey. The flowering takes place from spring to summer, lasting 2 to 3 months, earlier or later depending on the regions. The floral bud is an involucre composed of tight bracts, somewhat resembling a small artichoke.  Flowers carried by stiff stems of 50-60 cm (20-24in), reveal the uniqueness of this selection. These are large heads, 5 cm (2in) in diameter, with a mauve and purple centre striped with black, surrounded by longer petals in a white-blue colour.  It is a nectar-producing plant that produces high-calorie pollen, highly appreciated by pollinating insects, especially bumblebees.

 

 

Centaurea montana 'Purple Heart' is a perennial plant that is perfect in a countryside setting or in a natural border. Showcase it against a backdrop of Allium azureum, where this perennial cornflower will not go unnoticed.  A historic plant of wild and romantic gardens, the perennial cornflower is also highly appreciated in more contemporary compositions. It is also a plant that is well suited to an alpine garden, where it can accompany, for example, rockroses and red valerian. 'Purple Heart' pairs wonderfully with the blue flowers of the species, purple or pink centaureas, or even with the incredible blue of the wild chicory. It can also be accompanied by small grasses such as Stipa or golden-leaved Carex. It will find its place in a rockery,  a border, along paths or lawns, and in the creation of beautiful country bouquets or for dried flowers.

Centaurea montana Purple Heart in pictures

Centaurea montana Purple Heart (Flowering) Flowering
Centaurea montana Purple Heart (Foliage) Foliage

Flowering

Flower colour white
Flowering time April to June
Inflorescence Flower head
Flower size 6 cm
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 60 cm
Spread at maturity 40 cm
Growth rate normal

Botanical data

Genus

Centaurea

Species

montana

Cultivar

Purple Heart

Family

Asteraceae

Other common names

Perennial Cornflower, Great Blue-bottle, Mountain Bluet, Mountain Centaury

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Planting and care

Plant Centaurea montana 'Purple Heart' in ordinary, preferably well-drained soil, even clay or limestone or poor soil, in full sun or partial shade. It tolerates heavy and moist soils but prefers stony or occasionally dry soils. Water it well at planting and maintain regular watering for the first 8 weeks. After flowering, cut back the flower stalks to the ground, to encourage a second flowering in late summer.

Centaurea montana is sensitive to powdery mildew in summer. As soon as the foliage is affected (it becomes covered in "white"), after the first flowering, prune the plant close to the ground. After a few waterings, new foliage and flowers will develop.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to May, August to October

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Rockery, Woodland edge
Type of use Border, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -34°C (USDA zone 4) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Planting density 5 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Moist soil, Well-drained

Care

Pruning instructions Cut the withered flower stalks in summer to promote a second flowering in late summer.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time July to August
Disease resistance Average
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
4,7/5

Spring flowering perennials

Haven't found what you were looking for?