All categories

Plume Poppy (Macleaya Cordata) 10 seeds

Plume Poppy (Macleaya Cordata) 10 seeds
Views: 8249 Product Code: #509
Availability: In Stock
$1.25
Qty: Add to Cart

SECURE PAYMENTS
We do not process credit cards directly and will never be in contact with your credit card information.

EASY CHECKOUT
We accept Credit/Debit cards, PayPal, USPS Money Orders, Western Union.

FAST ORDER DISPATCH
We ship paid orders in 24 hours.

GERMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
We always include printed germination instructions.

Very rapid spreading, very tall perennial native to China and Japan.
Plants are good for the backs of large borders and specimen plantings only, because of their size ( up to 10x8 feet or 3,00x2,50m ) and potentially invasive rhizomes.
BUT used in the right setting; the Plume Poppies are SPECTACULAR!!!
The handsome, deeply-lobed foliage is very large, to 20 inches / 50 cm wide. The leaves are blue-green above and whitish beneath.
The creamy-white flowers are borne on plume like panicles up to 3 feet long, during mid to late summer.
Info source: rslandscapedesign.blogspot.com

Genus - Macleaya
Species - Cordata
Common name - Plume Poppy
Pre-Treatment - Not-required
Hardiness zones - 3 - 8
Height - 5'-7' / 1.50 - 2.10(5) m
Spread - 2'-3' / 0.60 - 0.90 m
Plant type - Flower, Perennial
Vegetation type - Deciduous
Exposure - Full Sun, Partial Shade
Growth rate - Fast
Soil PH - 6.1-7.5 (mildly acidic to neutral)
Soil type - Well drained, moist
Water requirements - Average water needs. Water regularly, no overwatering
Landscape uses - A very ornamental plant, it can be grown as an isolated specimen in a lawn. An excellent plant for sub-tropical bedding.
Germination rate - 79%
Bloom season - July - September
Leaf / Flower color - Green / Creamy white

Useful Info
GerminationSeeds should be sown in the early spring. No special pre treatment required.
Sow in moist soil, keep warm and in light position (no direct sunlight for germination). Germination in 2 weeks but can be irregular and spread out over 4-6 weeks.
When they are large enough to handle, prick the seedlings out into individual pots and grow them on in the greenhouse for their first winter. Plant them out into their permanent positions in late spring or early summer, after the last expected frosts. Division in the dormant season. Basal cuttings in late spring. Harvest the shoots with plenty of underground stem when they are about 8 - 10cm above the ground. Pot them up into individual pots and keep them in light shade in a cold frame or greenhouse until they are rooting well. Plant them out in the summer. Cuttings from the axils of larger leaves in early summer. Root cuttings in the winter.