Primula ‘Miss Indigo’

Primula ‘Miss Indigo’

£6.50

Out of stock

Potsize – 1L

Primula ‘Miss Indigo’ has rich blue flowers with a fringe of irregular white at the edge and yellow splashes in the flower centre.

Discount of 25p per plant for quantities 3 or over or for any 10 from the ‘Higly Bred Primula’ category

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Description

Primula ‘Miss Indigo’

Primula ‘Miss Indigo’ has rich blue flowers with a fringe of irregular white at the edge and yellow splashes in the flower centre.

The genus Primula covers over 400 species which inhabit many continents, but almost all come from areas of cool summers with adequate moisture and humidity when in active growth. Although many come from high altitude areas in the Himalayas they will readily thrive in Britain given humus rich soils and shade from the heat of the sun.

Our native Primrose, P.vulgaris, was once a common sight in woodland, hedge banks and railway cuttings wher its scented yellow blossonms announced the arrival of Spring. Indeed its very name, Primrose, is derived from the Latin ‘prima rosa’ the first rose of the year. It has given us a host of ‘modern’ multi-coloured offspring and hybrids another British native, the cowslip (P.veris). Even double forms in a variety of colours exist. Primroses enjoy medium to heavy moisture retentive loam with added organic matter and a cool position, easily afforded by ensuring a little shade.

Primula elatior, our native oxlip, and P.veris, the cowslip, are plants of damp meadows but do equally well in the garden even in full sun if other plants can afford the crown a little shade in high Summer.

Primroses are heteromorphic;  that is they exist with flowers that either have  long style and short stamens or the reverse case. This is a mechanism to ensure cross pollination between plants, bees having visited one type of flower only being able to deposit pollen to the other type of flower. Plants with a long style are known as pin-eyed, those with long stamens thrum-eyed.

Before modern agriculture, the fragrant booms were so prolific that they were gathered to make Primrose wine, Primrose pottage or crystallised for cake decorations. It also found favour in high places as Queen Victoria is reported to have sent a wreath of Disraeli’s favourite Primroses as a tribute to her friend on his death in 1881.

Its notable that the flowers of all of our native Primula are carried on umbels, with the flower stalks all coming from one point. It’s not obvious, but if you trace the flower stems back on a Primrose you will find they all come from a single point just like those of the cowslip

In Britain, oxlips are very localised in their distribution being stubbornly tied to ancient woodland. As such they are excellent indicator plants for this environment

Cowslips leaves were eaten in salads and the flowers made into wine

Cowslip derives from the Anglo Saxon ‘Cuy lippe’ meaning cow pat, indicating their growing in meadows or alternatively from ‘Cow’s Leek’ where leek is an old name for any plant. The botanical name, Primula veris, means the firstling of spring. It has a wealth of old names, including Herb Peter, Paigle, Peggle, Key Flower, Our Lady’s Keys, Fairy cups, Petty Mulleins, Crewel, Buckles, Palsywort, Plumrocks, Mayflower, Password, Artetyke, Arthritica and Drelip. Some of these names are connected. The Norse saw a bunch of keys in the flowers and thought them the keys to the Goddess Freya’s treasure palace, she being the Key Virgin. A change of religion transferred the idea to the Virgin Mary and on to Saint Peter whose emblem is a key.

In Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream you find a Fairy connection, alluding to the red spots on the corolla being a hint to magical properties to cure the complexion.

 ‘In their gold coats spots you see,

These be rubies fairy favours

In those freckles lie their savours.’

The nodding flowers of cowslip were given for the ‘shaking palsy’. One remedy for faintness was given as ‘sniffing the juice of the flowers through a quill.’

A final word can be given to Turner – Laboratoire Garnier please take note…

‘Some women we find, sprinkle ye flowers of cowslip with whyte wine and after still it and wash their faces with that water to drive wrinkles away and to make them fayre in the eyes of the worlde rather than in the eyes of God, Whom they are not afrayd to offend.’

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