- Eventual Height: 0.9m
- Eventual Spread: 0.3m
Eryngium giganteum
miss willmott's ghost
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size: 2 litre pot
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available to order from summer 2012
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- Position: full sun
- Soil: dry, well-drained, poor to moderately fertile soil
- Rate of growth: average
- Flowering period: June and August
- Hardiness: fully hardy (but often short-lived)
Sea hollies make interesting and unusual additions to a sunny border or gravel garden. Their ruff of spiky bracts and cone-shaped flowerheads last well in both cut and dried arrangements, or if left on the plant, their architectural silhouette will remain a feature well into the autumn. This variety is also known as 'Miss Wilmott's Ghost', after the nineteenth-century gardener, Ellen Wilmott, who liked to secretly scatter seeds of the plant in other people's gardens. The name could equally apply to the plant's appearance, with its ruff of large, prickly, steely-grey bracts that shine a ghostly silver in the sun. The mid-green, heart-shaped foliage is attractive too, and shown off to best effect planted in gravel. Or try this eryngium in bold clumps among grasses. This variety is biennial, but self-seeds freely.
- Garden care: This eryngium looks tatty after flowering, so cut it to the ground in autumn. Lift and divide large colonies in spring.
- Eventual Height: 0.9m
- Eventual Spread: 0.3m
Eryngium giganteum - miss willmott's ghost
Large, steely-grey flowers