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Collection of 60 Blue Gladioli

Gladiolus (x) grandiflorus Sweet Blue, Home Coming, Purple Flora

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Whilst the forgotten gladioli last year didn't bloom superbly due to the heatwave.

Aurore B., 11/09/2019

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Collection contains 60 plants

  • 20 x Gladiolus Purple Flora - Sword Lily
  • 20 x Gladiolus Home Coming - Sword Lily
  • 20 x Gladiolus Sweet Blue - Sword Lily

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

A collection of 60 Gladioli in blue and purple tones, rather rare in these plants. It is composed of the varieties Sweet Blue, with large lavender blue flowers, Home Coming, with its corollas beautifully speckled with violet on a white background, and Purple Flora, which is a pure and intense violet. In flower beds or borders, these gladioli will bloom all summer, in the sun, in damp but well-drained soil. Their spikes loaded with large flowers also make splendid summer bouquets.
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -6°C
Soil type
Silty-loamy (rich and light)
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Best planting time March to April
Recommended planting time March to May, September to October
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Flowering time July to September
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Collection items (60 plants)

  • Gladiolus Purple Flora - Sword Lily

    Price per single item: 0,33 €
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  • Gladiolus Home Coming - Sword Lily

    Price per single item: 0,33 €
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  • Gladiolus Sweet Blue - Sword Lily

    Price per single item: 0,33 €
    Find out more

Description

This is a collection of 60 Gladiolus in shades of blue and purple, cool tones that are rather rare in these plants. It consists of the varieties 'Sweet Blue', 'Home Coming', and 'Purple Flora', in a gradient ranging from lavender blue to pure violet. With unmatched elegance in a vase, their spikes loaded with large flowers are spectacular in flower beds and summer borders. Give them a cool but well-drained soil, and a sunny exposure.

This collection consists of:

- 20 Sweet Blue gladiolus: with large flowers of a light lavender blue with mauve reflections, celestial, bright, with ruffled petals, as if woven from satin. Its stems are strong, tall, about 1 m (3ft) high, and covered with numerous buds.

- 20 Home Coming gladiolus: a new variety of great class, with large almost white flowers adorned with a subtle violet pattern at the throat. They are tightly packed in a perfect order on long, tall, and bright spikes. Its robust floral stem rises 80-80 cm (32in) above the ground.

- 20 Purple Flora gladiolus: its sturdy 1 m (3ft) tall stems bear spikes of flowers of a pure and rich violet, without any trace of white or pink. A rare colour in these plants, of undeniable elegance, easy to combine with other flowers in bouquets and in the garden.

Individually labelled.

Cultivated gladioli, belonging to the Iridaceae family, are hybrid plants. They are divided into 3 main groups: Grandiflorus (large flowers), Primulinus (early), and Nanus like (butterflies). 'Sweet Blue', 'Home Coming', and 'Purple Flora' belong to the Grandiflorus group.  Gladiolus is a perennial herbaceous plant with wide, sword-shaped leaves arranged in a fan shape, forming a clump of leaves that are topped by a dense spike bearing large funnel-shaped flowers. The storage organ is a corm, which is a swollen stem equipped with scales. To enjoy flowers throughout the summer, plant your corms at intervals of 15 days from March to May.

  

Gladioli and their long coloured stems are a symbol of the 70s and somewhat formal floral arrangements. While they are irreplaceable in bouquets, in gardens, their silhouette needs the presence of plants with lush foliage that will enhance their rich but wildly romantic flowering. Plant their corms among clumps of sage, tobacco, bee balm, and forget-me-nots, for example, or among small ornamental grasses like Stipa or blue fescues. They are regulars in cottage gardens, where they accompany vegetables well. For making bouquets, cut the flower stems when the first floret begins to open. Plant them at intervals of two weeks from early spring until the end of June to flower the house and garden all summer.

The gladiolus owes its name to the shape of its sword-like leaves, derived from the Latin gladius. Its wild forms were often represented in jewellery.

 

Plant habit

Height at maturity 90 cm
Spread at maturity 20 cm
Growth rate very fast

Flowering

Flower colour blue
Flowering time July to September
Inflorescence Spike
Flower size 10 cm
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous

Botanical data

Genus

Gladiolus

Species

(x) grandiflorus

Cultivar

Sweet Blue, Home Coming, Purple Flora

Family

Iridaceae

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference86016

Planting and care

Gladioli like rich, fertile but well-drained soils, so sandy and loamy soils are ideal. Plant it in full sun. Space the bulbs 10 to 15 cm (4 to 6in) apart and cover them with 10 cm (4in) of soil. Avoid using manure to fertilise the soil, as it promotes bulb rot. Gladioli are susceptible to frost, so they should be dug up when they have withered or immediately after the first frost. Cut the leaves off and let them dry in a well-ventilated place for three weeks. Detach the old bulbs, store the new bulbs and bulblets throughout the winter in a cool place, protected from frost. The bulblets will bloom in two years. It is advisable not to plant gladiolus bulbs in the same spot for several years in a row. An annual rotation will yield better results. In mild climates, corms can be planted in September-October and left in the ground over winter without damage.

Planting period

Best planting time March to April
Recommended planting time March to May, September to October
Planting depth 10 cm

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Border
Hardiness Hardy down to -6°C (USDA zone 9a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 35 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil moisture Moist soil, Well-drained, fertile soil.

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Soil moisture Moist soil
Disease resistance Average
Overwinter Needs to be stored
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