Hippeastrum (Diamond Group) 'Picotee'

amaryllis Picotee bulb

Eventual height & spread

Hippeastrum (Diamond Group) 'Picotee'

amaryllis Picotee bulb

  • 1 × bulb
  • £12.99
  • available to order from summer
  • 3 × bulbs
  • £36.00 £38.97
  • available to order from summer
  • 14cm pot
  • £14.99
  • available to order from spring
Delivery options
  • Bulbs (only) £4.95
  • Position: bright but not in full sun
  • Soil: good quality potting compost
  • Flowering period: December to February
  • Hardiness: frost tender
  • Bulb size: 26/28


Large white, funnel-shaped flowers, edged with a fine, pencil-thin red margin and prominent stamens, 'Picotee' is a beautifully elegant, award-winning winter or spring flowering bulbous perennial. With statuesque blooms rising above mid-green foliage, this Diamond Group amaryllis would make a perfect gift for gardeners and plant lovers.


  • General care:
    Set the bulb in a pot containing good quality compost so that the top two-thirds are exposed. Water the compost only when the surface is dry; too much just after potting can cause the bulb to rot. Keep the plant in a bright spot avoiding direct sun, and rotate the plant periodically to avoid the emerging flower stalk leaning towards the light. Leaves will appear shortly after flowering.

    Once flowering has finished, cut off the flower stalk 5-10cm above the bulb - don't cut off the foliage. Water when the surface of the compost is dry and feed fortnightly with a balanced liquid fertiliser. Reduce and cease watering from early autumn and move to a dry, dark spot for a few months allowing the foliage to die back, simulating the dormant, dry season of the plant’s native South America. In November bring it back into the light and begin watering again. Old foliage should be removed, though take care not to remove any new shoots. Expect flowers in six to eight weeks.

    Please note that newly planted bulbs, using the technique described above, can take up to eight weeks to flower so plant or purchase as gifts in mid- to late October for flowering at Christmas. Bulbs purchased as gifts for Christmas are likely to flower from early February onwards.
    • Humans/Pets: Harmful if eaten