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Campanula seeds Page2
| Type Sowing Temp Cover Seed Advice |
Perennial 18-20°C Do not cover Sow spring and summer. Light needed for germination |
| Campanula
Pearl White NEW C. Carpatica Compact and earlier than the other varieties, Pearl is ideal for pot plants, containers and hardy border plants. Note a small percentage of blue flowering plants may be present in this variety.
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| Campanula Pearl Deep Blue NEW C. Carpatica Compact and earlier than the other varieties, Pearl is ideal for pot plants, containers and hardy border plants.
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| Campanula Poscharskyana
30cm Trailing habit with star shaped violet flowers, trailing rockery plant. pkt approx 250 seeds
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| Campanula Garganica 10-15 cm Trailing rich blue star shaped flowers suited to rockery or wall.
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| Campanula Glomerata
Acaulis
45cm Clustered Bellflower. Excellent cut flower and border plant. Clusters of dark violet flowers on 20cm stems. Flowers form globe shaped clusters.
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| Campanula Stella
Blue
campanula isophylla Tender perennial Glasshouse perennial Sow July to January at 15-20°C do not cover seed, grow cool. Up to October sowings will benefit from 4 hours per night tungsten lighting, reducing to 2 hours for December to March sowings for commercial pot production. A superb quality pot plant, excellent in hanging baskets. Star shaped flowers of true campanula Blue over heart shaped mid-green foliage.
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| Campanula Stella White As above but pure white star shaped flowers.
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Cut Flower Type
Campanula Champion
| Campanula Champion
Pink Pelleted seed. These exciting cut-flower Campanulas produce impressive flower stems in just 15 weeks. Pink bell shaped flowers.
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C.medium
Biennial treat as annual Sow
15-20°C on compost surface, for summer flowering sow Feb to March
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Calycanthema Mixed
80-100cm C.medium Canterbury Bells Beautiful saucer shaped flowers in a mixture of Violet Blue and Pastel Pink.
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The cultural
information should be used as a guide only, I have found a number
of different sowing techniques for the same seed from different
sources there does not seem to be a standard. With this in mind
you should use this website as a guide only, you probably already
have a tried and tested way of sowing different seeds. As a rule
of thumb the larger the seed size the more cover it requires, and
fine seed like Lobelia Begonia etc requires no cover.
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