Viola ‘Columbine’ (viola)

Viola ‘Columbine’ (viola)

£6.00

Out of stock

Potsize – 1L

I do love the endearing faces of the perennials violas, but Columbine is my favourite. The neat pansy flowers are streaked and splashed with a blend of soft blues and bright violet over a white ground with the brightest golden eye. As if that were not temptation enough, the scent produced is the sweetest and strongest of any flower I know – transporting a tray of them in the car to plant fairs is better than a trip to any fancy perfume store. Evergreen mats of foliage, flowering about 8 inches high from May until September, especially if dead headed and trimmed lightly in July.

Discount of 25p per plant for quantities of 3 or over

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Description

Viola ‘Columbine’ (viola)

I do love the endearing faces of the perennials violas, but Viola ‘Columbine’ is my favourite. The neat pansy flowers are streaked and splashed with a blend of soft blues and bright violet over a white ground with the brightest golden eye. As if that were not temptation enough, the scent produced is the sweetest and strongest of any flower I know – transporting a tray of them in the car to plant fairs is better than a trip to any fancy perfume store. Evergreen mats of foliage, flowering about 8 inches high from May until September, especially if dead headed and trimmed lightly in July.

 

Violets – Viola

Sweet Violet is native throughout Europe including the British Isles where it is the only fragrant violet.

For cultivation they prefer a soil that is neither too heavy nor too light, with a good supply of humus and advantage. They should be situated ideally where they do not receive excessive sun in the Summer (which can exacerbate attack by Red Spider Mite), but get ample sun in the autumn to promote good flower initiation.

Some countries still grow sweet violet as a commercial crop for the perfume industry. You can extract the essential oil from the flowers, although the foliage does carry some scent itself.

There has been a long association with Violets and death, particularly of the young, a connection they share with Primroses. You can find references to this in the works of Milton and Shakespeare. Another adverse association is with fleas, with a superstition in Gloucestershire stopping people bringing them into the house. It probably stems from the habit of some small insects of burrowing into and feeding off the stems.

Violets were adopted as the emblem of the Imperial Napoleonic Party. This follows his statement on departing to exile in Elba that he would ‘Return with Violets’.

Naming

Viola is the original Latin name for the violet and probably stems from the Greek word ‘ion’=violet. (Jupiter created the violet as a fitting food for Ione who he had turned into a cowFrom viola has come the common name we use, violet, via the French ‘violette’. The specific epithet ‘odorata’ means fragrant.

In common parlance many diverse plants have carried the name Violet . Possibly, this may stem from ‘the word vias’ meaning wayside. Try out these for instance: Snowdrop (Narcissus Violet), Honest (Strange Violet), Gentian (Calathian Violet) and Periwinkle (Marion’s Violet). You would therefore distinguish The true violet as the March Violet.

Cleistogamy

The violet flower is in one way peculiar, it is rich in honey and designed for bees, but blooms before bees are abundant. Many of these sweetly scented, honey rich flowers are sterile and bear no seed. However, there is a second flowering in the autumn of small, insignificant flowers hidden in the foliage. These flowers are fully fertile and do lead to seed, but have none of the insect attractants. They therefore tend to self-fertilise. In warmer countries these flowers may develop fully like the spring crop. This form of asymmetric double flowering is called cleistogamous and can be found in other plants such as Campanula and many of the grasses.

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