Potentilla bicolor

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Potentilla bicolor
Light:Full Sun Part Shade
Moisture:Mesic
Hardiness:6
Soil pH:5.6-8.4
Self Pollinated
Height:3'
Blooms:Mid Summer-Early Fall
Edible Rating:PFAF Edibility Rating
Tea:Yes
Poisonous

Potentilla bicolor

Propagation: Seed - sow early spring or autumn in a cold frame. 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. This is a hybrid species and it will not come true from seed.

Division in spring. Larger divisions can be planted out direct into their permanent positions. We have found that it is better to pot up the smaller divisions and grow them on in light shade in a cold frame until they are well established before planting them out in late spring or early summer.

Cultivation: An easily grown plant, succeeding in a well-drained loam, preferring a position in full sun but tolerating shade[1]. It prefers an alkaline soil but tolerates a slightly acid soil[2].

Members of this genus are rarely if ever troubled by browsing deer[3].

Range: A hybrid of garden origin, P. atrosanguinea x P. argyrophylla.

Habitat: Not known in the wild.

Edibility: Root - cooked[4].

Pollinators: Insects

Soil: Can grow in light, medium, and heavy soils.

Drainage: Prefers well drained soil.

Flower Type: Hermaphrodite

Links

References

  1. Chittendon, Fred. RHS Dictionary of Plants. Oxford University Press, 1951.
  2. Huxley, Anthony. The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening. MacMillan Press, 1992.
  3. Thomas, Graham. Perennial Garden Plants. J. M. Dent & Sons, 1990.
  4. Usher, George. A Dictionary of Plants Used by Man. Constable, 1974.