Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’

Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’

£7.00

14 in stock

Potsize – 1L

Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’. All the wow factor of ‘Arnhem’ and its smart little flowers but on a more modest scale of plant. The foliage still makes a luxurious mound but is finer in all its aspects than either ‘Arnhem’ or menziesii and shows a red midrib. The flowers are perhaps a shade darker and the flowering stems are plentiful and rise about 3 feet. It manages to make a statement in the border without adding too much weight.

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14 in stock

Description

Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’

All the wow factor of ‘Arnhem’ and its smart little flowers but on a more modest scale of plant. The foliage of Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’ still makes a luxurious mound but is finer in all its aspects than either ‘Arnhem’ or menziesii and shows a red midrib. The flowers are perhaps a shade darker and the flowering stems are plentiful and rise about 3 feet. Sanguisorba ‘Chocolate Tip’ manages to make a statement in the border without adding too much weight.

Great Burnet, Burnet Bloodroot – Sanguisorba

Bloodroot, or Sanguisorba offincinalis is native to Europe including the British Isles, though it is not widespread. The Midlands and North are where you would mostly find it. It grows in damp meadows and pasture as do most Sanguisorba, the notable exception being Sanguisorba minor which grows on dry grassy or rocky places, often on lime. The related Sanguisorba minor (salad burnet) is found on chalk and limestone grassland and grows further north and South.

People grow Sanguisorbas for their flowers which are either pink or white bottle-brushes or cone-like on well branched airy flower stalks. The foliage is equally attractive being pinnate like a Rowan tree. The suit the border or more naturalistic plantings equally well.

Derivation

The common name for the burnets comes from the colour of the flowerheads, burnet is a word for crimson-red. The Latin name comes from the use of the herb in antiquity for staunching bleeding. The Latin ‘sanguis’=blood and ‘sorbeo’=I asorb, hence Sanguisorba. Sanguisorba officinalis (Greater Burnet) has the strongest medicinal effect and was the herbalists plant of choice for staunching bleeding both internal and external. Do not use Sanguisorba medicinally unless supervised by a trained professional. Sanguisorba minor (Salad Burnet) has similar but milder effect and was much used in the past. It was used to flavour wine. Gerard says of it – ‘the leaves steeped in wine and drunken comfort the heart and make it merry and are good against the trembling and shaking thereof.’ It was used in such quantity that it was formally known as ‘Toper’s Plant’.

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Additional information

British Native

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