Eventual height & spread
Aquilegia vulgaris 'Pink Petticoat'
granny's bonnet (syn. Aquilegia vulgaris petty coat)
- approx 40 seeds
- £3.99
- available to order from autumn
Delivery options
- Seed Packets (only) £2.99
- Position: full sun or partial shade
- Soil: fertile, moist, well-drained soil
- Rate of growth: average to fast
- Flowering period: May to June
- Hardiness: fully hardy
Frilled, semi-double blooms in pink fading to white give this cultivated variety its layered, petticoat-like flowers. Green buds open to soft, bicolour-blended petals with the classic columbine spurs extending behind.
Compact blue-green foliage forms a neat mound beneath the airy flower stems. Aquilegia vulgaris 'Pink Petticoat' flowers in late spring to early summer, bringing colour to borders, pots, and woodland edges.
Hardy and easy to grow, it suits cottage gardens or modern spaces alike and also makes a charming cut flower for the vase.
Compact blue-green foliage forms a neat mound beneath the airy flower stems. Aquilegia vulgaris 'Pink Petticoat' flowers in late spring to early summer, bringing colour to borders, pots, and woodland edges.
Hardy and easy to grow, it suits cottage gardens or modern spaces alike and also makes a charming cut flower for the vase.
Plant Aquilegia in sun or partial shade in moist but well-drained soil. It's tolerant of a range of soil types and will often self-seed if happy, creating natural-looking drifts.
Remove faded flower stems to tidy the plant or leave them to self-seed.
Lift and divide large clumps in early spring and apply a generous 5–7cm (2–3in) mulch of well-rotted manure or garden compost around the plant. Divided specimens may take some time to establish since they don't like having their roots disturbed.
Remove faded flower stems to tidy the plant or leave them to self-seed.
Lift and divide large clumps in early spring and apply a generous 5–7cm (2–3in) mulch of well-rotted manure or garden compost around the plant. Divided specimens may take some time to establish since they don't like having their roots disturbed.
In autumn, surface-sow on moist compost in small pots or seed trays and keep them in a greenhouse or cold frame at 15-20°C (59-68°F). Germination can be slow (up to 3 months) but seedlings should be thinned out as they grow on and over-wintered under glass before planting out after hardening off in spring. Alternatively, spring sowing can be undertaken as before, often without the need for heat.
Alternatively, spring sowing can be undertaken as before, often without the need for heat.
Alternatively, spring sowing can be undertaken as before, often without the need for heat.