For maximum colour and minimum effort perennials are the way to go. Without too much effort, and provided they suit your soil and conditions, they should return annually giving your garden colour all year round. Find your own particular favourite within our range or take the plunge and introduce your garden to new species, colours and blooms.
Their season may be shorter, but they need less work and can be better value. Put those benefits together with the aeration and long-term nutrient supply that their roots can bring to your garden and perennials look like star-performers. But, as ever, its all down to conditions. Understand your soil, the conditions in your garden and the conditions that your favoured perennial prefers and all should be well
Showing 19–36 of 141 results
Scrophularia nodosa. Dark reddish brown flowers in open, branched cluster. Likes a damp shaded area.
Pulicaria dysenterica. Daisy like golden yellow flowers about 1.9cm across.
Very showy, tough plant with a profusion of pink/purple flowers.
A good meadow plant with pink pea flowers on tough stems arresting the harrow. Attractive to bees.
A perennial with reddish pink flower spikes with arrow shaped leaves that turn crimson.
A shrub-like perennial plant with clusters of golden yellow flowers.
White-pink umbel-like flowers, a good woodland plant that like light shaded conditions.
Also known as Queen Anne's lace. White umbrella-like clusters of white flowers.
Primula veris. Gay and beloved, becoming scarce, fragrant deep yellow flower. Likes Damp meadows.
Ranunculus repens. Very common in damp places, ditches and flooded areas also likes woodland areas.
Cardamine pratensis. Often known as Lady's smock. Plant of damp meadows and stream banks. Lovely lilac/white flowers.
Attractive bright yellow – green tufted sedge, drooping sausage shaped flowers.
Hesperis matronalis. Purple or white flowers which become very fragrant towards the evening, looks good in a border and attracts butterflies.
Taraxacum officinale. A golden blaze in the May meadows and banks. Basal rosettes of leaves deeply lobed or toothed (dent de lion), flowers are composed of bright yellow ray florets.
A lovely plant – A rosette of leaves throws up a spike of rich yellow flowers with orange anthers, grow in herbaceous border.
The best butterfly plant. Round blue-purple flowers with purple anthers.
Filipendula vulgaris. Finely cut leaflets in a basal rosette, foamy cream coloured flowers open from pink buds.
Oenothera biennis. Biennial with large scented flowers (7cm across) on tall spikes loved by moths. Excellent for the back of a summer border.
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