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Erica cinerea Rosa Bella - Bell Heather

Erica cinerea Rosa Bella
Bell Heather, Heather

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More information

Highly hardy, it is one of the most beautiful varieties there is, with its hundreds of small fuchsia pink bells and its delicate dark green foliage. The flowering period is long, from July to October. It forms an evergreen cushion with a very natural appearance, suitable for planting on dry slopes and in light woods. It requires an acidic and well-drained soil.
Flower size
6 mm
Height at maturity
35 cm
Spread at maturity
40 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -29°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil, Moist soil
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Best planting time March to April, September to October
Recommended planting time February to April, October to December
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Flowering time July to October
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Description

Erica cinerea 'Rosa Bella' is a hardy undershrub and one of the most beautiful varieties there is, with its hundreds of small fuchsia pink bells emerging from a prostrate tuft with fine dark green foliage. It is an improvement on the variety 'Atrosanguinea', and even more vigorous and floriferous. The flowering is long, from July to October, heralding the arrival of autumn. It forms an evergreen cushion with a very natural appearance, and is a plant of dry slopes and light woods, requiring acidic and well-drained soil to thrive.

Erica cinerea 'Rosa Bella' belongs to the Ericaceae family, it is an English selection of the wild form Erica cinerea, native to western Europe, where it grows in heathlands and siliceous woods. This plant is very common in France. The 'Rosa Bella' cultivar forms a low and dense bush, with prostrate and tortuous growth, reaching a height of 35 cm (14in), with a spread of 45 cm (18in). The rigid, low and spreading tips of its twisted branches straighten up, revealing an ashy and pubescent bark, covered in tiny dark green linear leaves, glabrous. Its small bell-shaped flowers, a very vivid pink, measure from 4 to 5 mm (0in) in length and are grouped in small elongated clusters, at the top of leafy stems. They appear in the middle of summer and last until October, and are highly visited by bees. The evergreen foliage is dark green and glossy, turning slightly bronze in autumn.

The 'Rosa Bella' heather will find its place in a peaty rockery, in non-burning sun, accompanied by other heathers whose flowering will take over afterwards. To add a touch of fancy, they can be mixed with some grasses that will lighten their mass: Deschampsia cespitosa 'Northern Lights', Deschampsia flexuosa 'Tatra Gold', Molinia caerulea 'Variegata'. They can also be mixed in a low and shaded bed with azaleas, bearberry, cassiope or Lithodora fruticosa. Heathers form beautiful carpets at the base of larger shrubs—mountain laurels, rhododendrons, brooms, deciduous azaleas—which also appreciate acidic soil. Erica cinerea is also a medicinal plant, used for its antiseptic and diuretic properties.

While heathers and in particular the genus Erica are associated with the humid Atlantic heaths of the oceanic north facade (Brittany, Ireland, Scotland), there are also heathers from dry climates and limestone soils, Mediterranean ones. But one of the richest areas in heather is located far away, in South Africa. In the Cape region, there is a vegetation formation on acidic soil, equivalent to our Mediterranean scrub vegetation, the Fynbos, which includes nearly 625 heather species out of the 740 that exist in the world.

Erica cinerea Rosa Bella - Bell Heather in pictures

Erica cinerea Rosa Bella - Bell Heather (Flowering) Flowering

Plant habit

Height at maturity 35 cm
Spread at maturity 40 cm
Habit creeping
Growth rate slow

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time July to October
Inflorescence Cluster
Flower size 6 mm
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour dark green

Botanical data

Genus

Erica

Species

cinerea

Cultivar

Rosa Bella

Family

Ericaceae

Other common names

Bell Heather, Heather

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference782011

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Planting and care

Erica cinerea 'Rosa Bella' prefers a fairly fertile soil, even though it can tolerate poor soil. But it should be peaty, light, sandy, very acidic, and well-drained. Plant in autumn or spring, without burying the collar too much. This plant enjoys non-scorching sunlight or partial shade. In the first two years, carefully weed around the base. Adapted to dry environments, the roots of heather plants are extensively branched in the soil and, once established, prevent the establishment of other species nearby. In case of prolonged drought, mulch the base to maintain some freshness. It can be useful to protect the foliage from severe cold by covering the plants with conifer branches, which should be removed at the end of winter. 

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Planting period

Best planting time March to April, September to October
Recommended planting time February to April, October to December

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Rockery, Woodland edge
Type of use Border, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 3 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil, draining, acidic

Care

Pruning instructions Prune the clumps halfway, just after flowering, from their early years, which will allow the clumps to remain dense while producing fresh foliage. If a part of the plant has frozen, prune in March, and it will regrow its branches.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time March, November
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil
Disease resistance Very good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground

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