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Anchusa azurea - Treat it like it's used to being treated--lean, well-drained to dry soil--and cut it back right after its first blooming, you'll be rewarded with a stalwart perennial that is crowned with myriads of intensely azure, true-blue blossoms atop a sturdy stalk in early summer and again in early fall. Cutting the flower stalk off at ground level after the first bloom encourages rebloom, as well as the formation of a stronger basal rosette of foliage--key to strong overwintering. Refrain from using hardwood or bark mulch around this plant; these products keep the ground too waterlogged for its liking. Mulch instead with pea gravel.
Wild bugloss has long, spatulate leaves that are covered with coarse hairs (like many members of the borage family). The much-branched flower stalk blooms with masses of small, forgetmenot-like blossoms of the most intense blue imaginable--a rare color in the flower garden. The roots of wild bugloss contain a pigment used for dye, and have historically been employed for their wound-healing properties. This is a perennial that is easy to start from seed, and in fact impossible to divide, as it has a single long taproot. Sow the seed in early autumn or early spring, either in place in the garden, or in deep pots or plug trays. The old standard cultivar of wild bugloss is 'Dropmore'. Personally, I can't tell a lot of difference between it and the species (shown in the photo). Perhaps its flowers are a hair larger. A new seed strain, 'Feltham Pride Strain,' promises more compact growth. Neither of these varieties is a true cultivar (asexually propagated), but rather a selected seed strain. |