Nymphaea 'James Brydon'
water lily
- 3 litre aquatic pot
- £23.99
- shipped within 2 weeks
Delivery options
- Standard £5.99
- Position: full sun
- Depth of water: 45-75cm (18-30in)
- Rate of growth: average
- Flowering period: June to September
- Hardiness: fully hardy
Vivid, carmine-red, cup-shaped flowers up to 12cm (5in) across with orange-red centres from June to September among a carpet of overlapping, bronze-green leaves. This versatile water lily will happily grow in sun or partial shade. Best planted at a depth of 45-75cm (1½-2½ft), Nymphaea 'James Brydon' is an excellent choice for a medium-sized pond.
Water lilies flourish in still water, so do not plant them near a pond pump or fountain, particularly where the water can splash onto their leaves.
These waterlilies are potted up (using a suitable aquatic compost) into aquatic pots. These pots are made of a fine mesh, which allows water to circulate through the compost, providing the plants with both oxygen and nutrients. As they are already potted, all you need to do is to place the pot into the pond, but this young plant will need potting up into a larger aquatic pot (using aquatic compost) within a few months.
Initially the pot should be placed on a stack of bricks so the leaves float on the surface of the water. As the plant matures, remove one layer of bricks at a time, gradually lowering the plant deeper into the pond until the desired depth has been reached. If you are placing this water lily in the autumn or winter when it has died back, place it at a depth of 50cm (20in). Then in the spring repot it into a larger pot and lower as the plant grows.
These waterlilies are potted up (using a suitable aquatic compost) into aquatic pots. These pots are made of a fine mesh, which allows water to circulate through the compost, providing the plants with both oxygen and nutrients. As they are already potted, all you need to do is to place the pot into the pond, but this young plant will need potting up into a larger aquatic pot (using aquatic compost) within a few months.
Initially the pot should be placed on a stack of bricks so the leaves float on the surface of the water. As the plant matures, remove one layer of bricks at a time, gradually lowering the plant deeper into the pond until the desired depth has been reached. If you are placing this water lily in the autumn or winter when it has died back, place it at a depth of 50cm (20in). Then in the spring repot it into a larger pot and lower as the plant grows.




