

Gladiolus Mix - Sword Lily
Gladiolus Mix - Sword Lily
Gladiolus x colvillei Mix
Colville's Gladiolus, Sword Lily
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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.
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Description
Gladioli or Gladiolus colvillei are shorter varieties than the large hybrids dedicated to cut flowers. They are more natural-looking with smaller, lighter flowers. These gladioli also have better resistance to cold, allowing the bulbs to be left in the ground in many regions, with a protective mulch in winter. We offer a mix of varieties in different colours, solid or two-tone, in shades of white, pink, red, purple... depending on the plants.
Hybrid Colville gladioli are herbaceous perennial plants, with thin, dark green, sword-shaped leaves arranged in a fan shaped clump 45 to 50 cm (18 to 20in) tall. Flowering takes place in June, sometimes in May depending on the climate. It takes the form of a flower spike with up to 10 buds blooming into flowers that have 6 petals and a diameter of 6-8 cm (2-3in), like small lilies carried on very thin stems. The flowers open gradually from bottom to top, forming beautiful flower spikes. The storage organ is a corm, which is a swollen stem with scales. Each corm will produce 2 or 3 flower spikes.
Gladioli and their long colourful spikes are symbolic of the 1970s and slightly formal floral arrangements. While they are irreplaceable in bouquets, in gardens their silhouette needs the presence of plants with lush foliage to showcase their abundant flowering. The dwarf Colville gladiolus fits well in simple perennial borders, without requiring staking. It pairs well with ground-cover roses (The Fairy, Knock Out), small grasses (Stipa pennata or tenuifolia), forget-me-nots, penstemons, and perennial flax, for example. Use bright pink and red for vibrancy, and add silver foliage here and there (stachys, dwarf artemisias). For bouquets, cut the flower spikes when the first floret begins to open. Plant them at intervals of two weeks from early spring until the end of June to have flowers in the house and garden all summer.
Gladiolus gets its name from the shape of its sword-like leaves, derived from the Latin word gladius. Its wild forms were often represented in jewellery or on carpets and fabrics made by the Semitic people before the Christian era.
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Gladiolus Mix - Sword Lily in pictures


Plant habit
Flowering
Foliage
Botanical data
Gladiolus
x colvillei
Mix
Iridaceae
Colville's Gladiolus, Sword Lily
Cultivar or hybrid
Other Gladioli
Planting and care
Plant the Colvillei Gladiolus corms in well-drained soil and sunny, wind-sheltered exposure under 8 to 10 cm (3 to 4in) of soil, spaced 10 to 15 cm (4 to 6in) apart.
Gladiolus likes rich, fertile, well-drained sandy soil and hates compact clay. Avoid using manure to fertilise the soil, as it promotes bulb rot. The plant should not lack water during its growth and flowering period, but its bulbs should be kept dry during the resting period. The corms of this variety can spend the winter in the ground, in well-drained, very healthy soil, covered with a thick mulch to prevent damage from severe frost. In very cold regions, the plants should be dug up as soon as the leaves have turned yellow, to be stored in compost and kept dry, sheltered from heat and frost. You can also grow them in pots, protected from the cold (20 bulbs for a 20 to 22 cm (8 to 9in) pot).
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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