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Pulmonaria Apple Frost - Lungwort
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Dispatch by letter from €3.90.
Delivery charge from €5.90 Oversize package delivery charge from €6.90.
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This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty
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We guarantee the quality of our plants for a full growing cycle, and will replace at our expense any plant that fails to recover under normal climatic and planting conditions.
From €5.90 for pickup delivery and €6.90 for home delivery
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The 'Apple Frost' Lungwort is a recent variety of lungwort, with magnificent foliage and good resistance to wet conditions. This lovely lungwort forms a semi-evergreen carpet of undulate leaves, mostly silver with variegated green spots. It adorns itself in spring with blue-violet corollas with a pink centre, creating a bright and colourful display. This mildew-resistant variety is a fabulous ground cover with stunning young foliage, perfect for shady flower beds. It often blooms before primroses and violets and is undoubtedly one of the first smiles of spring.
The 'Apple Frost' hybrid lungwort is a herbaceous perennial plant belonging to the same family as borage and brunnera, the boraginaceae. This variety is derived, among others, from Pulmonaria officinalis, a perfectly hardy European plant widespread in our cool woodlands.
The 'Apple Frost' variety catches the eye with its sparkling foliage, white-silver speckled with green apple, but also with its delicate flowering, which changes from blue-violet to deep purple-pink, as is the case with certain comfreys. This rhizomatous plant forms a 25 to 30 cm (10 to 12in) tall flowering carpet and spreads laterally without any theoretical limit. The undulate leaves are villous, those at the base are lanceolate, pointed at the top and rounded at the base, while those on the flowering stems are alternate, elongated, and without petioles. In April, angular, branching stems covered with rough hairs emerge from the foliage. At their tips, they bear pendulous cymes of small, fully open bell-shaped flowers that turn pink before fading. The creeping rhizome of lungworts produces new tufts of leaves after flowering, expanding the colony.
This lungwort is perennial and completely hardy, making it ideal as ground cover. In winter, in well-protected areas, its foliage is often evergreen. It quickly adds a splash of colour to depleted soil under trees, bushes, along facades, or north or east-facing paths, at the base of sunless walls. This plant is a boon where few plants are willing to grow, such as Symphytum caucasicum and the large periwinkle. It also fills shaded flower beds beautifully and can even grow under conifers. Plant some spring bulbs alongside your lungwort for sporadic flowering. Consider also mixing your flower bed with ground covers that bloom later, such as perennial Geranium nodosum.
Pulmonaria Apple Frost - Lungwort in pictures
Flowering
Foliage
Plant habit
Botanical data
Pulmonaria are good hardy perennial plants of leafy undergrowth where they find the necessary springtime moisture and, as they flower early, sufficient light before the trees have their leaves. They are not afraid of limestone and they all like a fresh but well-drained humus-bearing soil, which is often the case in a clear undergrowth, where the humus from dead leaves nourishes them and the tree roots drain excess water. That being said, they also accept a shaded position at the edge of a flower bed, and manage to grow in heavy and clayey soils. In our garden, we use them a lot to accompany hostas, primroses, small-growing astilbes, astrantias or even to fill the base of bushes.
Planting period
Intended location
Care
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Hardiness is the lowest winter temperature a plant can endure without suffering serious damage or even dying. However, hardiness is affected by location (a sheltered area, such as a patio), protection (winter cover) and soil type (hardiness is improved by well-drained soil).
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The flowering period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, etc.)
It will vary according to where you live:
In temperate climates, pruning of spring-flowering shrubs (forsythia, spireas, etc.) should be done just after flowering.
Pruning of summer-flowering shrubs (Indian Lilac, Perovskia, etc.) can be done in winter or spring.
In cold regions as well as with frost-sensitive plants, avoid pruning too early when severe frosts may still occur.
The planting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, United Kingdom, Ireland, Netherlands).
It will vary according to where you live:
The harvesting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions in USDA zone 8 (France, England, Ireland, the Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...) fruit and vegetable harvests are likely to be delayed by 3-4 weeks.
In warmer areas (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), harvesting will probably take place earlier, depending on weather conditions.
The sowing periods indicated on our website apply to countries and regions within USDA Zone 8 (France, UK, Ireland, Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...), delay any outdoor sowing by 3-4 weeks, or sow under glass.
In warmer climes (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), bring outdoor sowing forward by a few weeks.