You've found the famous Dave's Garden website! Join this friendly global community that shares tips and ideas for home and gardens, along with seeds and plants!
Check out the DG homepage for a brief overview of what you'll find in this gardening mega-site.
Login
If you don't have an account yet, visit the registration page to sign up.
Hardiness: USDA Zone 3a: to -39.9 °C (-40 °F) USDA Zone 3b: to -37.2 °C (-35 °F) USDA Zone 4a: to -34.4 °C (-30 °F) USDA Zone 4b: to -31.6 °C (-25 °F) USDA Zone 5a: to -28.8 °C (-20 °F) USDA Zone 5b: to -26.1 °C (-15 °F) USDA Zone 6a: to -23.3 °C (-10 °F) USDA Zone 6b: to -20.5 °C (-5 °F) USDA Zone 7a: to -17.7 °C (0 °F) USDA Zone 7b: to -14.9 °C (5 °F) USDA Zone 8a: to -12.2 °C (10 °F) USDA Zone 8b: to -9.4 °C (15 °F) USDA Zone 9a: to -6.6 °C (20 °F) USDA Zone 9b: to -3.8 °C (25 °F)
Sun Exposure: Sun to Partial Shade
Danger: Pollen may cause allergic reaction
Bloom Color: Pale Pink Pink Fuchsia (Red-Purple) White/Near White
Bloom Time: Late Spring/Early Summer
Foliage: Silver/Gray Velvet/Fuzzy-Textured
Other details: Drought-tolerant; suitable for xeriscaping
Soil pH requirements: 6.1 to 6.5 (mildly acidic) 6.6 to 7.5 (neutral) 7.6 to 7.8 (mildly alkaline)
Patent Information: Non-patented
Propagation Methods: By dividing the rootball From seed; direct sow outdoors in fall
Seed Collecting: Allow pods to dry on plant; break open to collect seeds
On Apr 20, 2013, vsdscart from Gold Hill, NC wrote:
Last year Mother Nature delivered this wonderful gift to me via bird poop into one of my zone 7b planters on the steps of my front porch, in the worst conditions of sun, heat and parched-ful-ness (is that a word?). Everything else in that planter has died from neglect but that Rose Campion has multiplied nicely though so far hasn't bloomed.
I wonder if I move it to a place that gets a bit more shade, it will bloom, or maybe the plant just doesn't bloom until it is over a year old, sort of like peonies. I hesitate to risk losing it by transplanting it.
I love the bright pink color and the soft furry, greeny grey leaves, and the fact that it multiplies gracefully and with dignity, as opposed to some plants that spread rudely and obnoxiously.
On Aug 23, 2011, Domehomedee from Arroyo Grande, CA (Zone 9a) wrote:
Here in 8b I had trouble with it reseeding to being invasive in my full sun flower garden. I moved it into the shade and it no longer reseeds. It still blooms in the shade and grows larger. This is a lovely plant, I'm glad I was able to get it under control.
On May 18, 2007, Shelbygarden from Shelby, OH wrote:
This flower virtually appeared out of nowhere last summer - I didn't plant it - (we've lived here 3 years) in my shady garden. Blooms were brilliant. This year the original plant didn't return but I got two seedlings for which I am very happy. I hope they will bloom this year.
We've had this plant forever, came with the house when we moved in. It is a very prolific self seeder, but not in a weedy way. I find it grows everywhere from hot sun to dry shade and in between. If deadheaded it will flower much longer.
On Feb 7, 2007, Bellisgirl from Spokane, WA wrote:
Hi! Ive had this plant for about three years. Lovely magenta flowers and silver leaves. There are a ton of seedlings from it, but I have no problem just plucking up the unwanted ones. It grows as a biannual for me; but I have many of them, so some are always in bloom.
On Aug 7, 2006, Aylatheresa from Rumford, RI wrote:
I love this plant every late spring it bursts into this bright fuschia color that lasts thru august, I never need to proprigate it since it self-seeds. I always have two stages the first year plant looks like lambs ear, while the second year plant has tall stalks and flowers.
These are wonderfully hardy plants that self-seed freely and grow anywhere. I suppose some would consider that invasive, but when you are trying to get something to grow on unimproved clay, it is a plus. Especially when they get walked on when they are small, and they still thrive! They aren’t difficult to get rid of when they seed where unwanted.
On Oct 22, 2005, zemerson from Calvert County, MD (Zone 7a) wrote:
It's a good thing these are nice looking plants because boy do they spread. My aunt has had these in her garden for years now... and she never even planted them. Every year they threaten to spread over the garden barrier and into the lawn :)
On Jul 13, 2005, CaptMicha from Brookeville, MD (Zone 7a) wrote:
This plant is a fast grower and produces mass flushes of fuchsia flowers that contrast nicely with the silvery foliage.
In my zone 7, it's an evergreen and provides nice winter interest. This is the first year of flowers so I can't comment on it's invasive possibilities although I can say that a few transplanted seedlings turned into a large stand of rose campions.
Updated on 7/30/06:
This year there were plants everywhere from reseeding. However, my origional plant was planted out in the open so I don't have any hard to get at seedlings.
They're really easy to pop out of the soil with that forked weeding tool because they don't have an extensive root system.
On Jun 30, 2005, tiiuflora from Hopewell Junction, NY wrote:
What a great performer - self-seeders rule in my garden.I have the magenta flowers. No one has mentioned that this plant is DEER-PROOF!!!!!! My plants are right in the middle of heavy deer traffic - the black-eyed susans are all nipped, so are the peony leaves but the rose campion is totally untouched. That makes this plant 'highly desirable' for me.
On Jun 9, 2005, bayouposte from Bossier City, LA (Zone 8a) wrote:
I love the way the flourescent look of the magenta flowers on the silvery foliage. Puts on such a spectacular sow early when it can be really appreciated.
On Jun 6, 2005, PurplePansies from Deal, NJ (Zone 7a) wrote:
One of my favorite garden plants of all time. A MUST FOR EVERY GARDEN! Super easy to grow (in sun and pretty well drained soil .... not too much winter wet) .... Pretty flowers and gorgeous silvery foliage.... like lamb's ears but with those lovely magenta or white or pale flowers..... (no scent :( )..... Very easy to grow from seed. Blooms at a nice time to help fill in spring - summer gap.
On Mar 26, 2005, pdxJules from Portland, OR (Zone 8a) wrote:
This is clearly one of the easiest plants to make a new gardener feel like a success - so i take it to Swaps.
I prefer the Campion in shade - becuase the light foliage brightens up the area, the tall stems do not dry out as badly as in the sun - meaning LESS deadheading/trimming WORK - and it keeps on blooming for a longer period. Much easier. I got a White-flowered Campion in a trade,
and can share seed - and starts/divisions...as this plant acts as a perennial in the Pacific NW - even living thru week-long ice storms!
On Aug 23, 2004, walksaved from Spokane, WA wrote:
Spokane has very dry, hot summers. When I bought this house a few years ago the landscaping had suffered years of neglect. There was one flower that had well survived the summer months of virtually no rain. I didn't know what it was at the time but the magenta flowers were striking. Yes, this Lychnis self sows but what a survivor. And those magenta flowers sure brighten things up. The wayward seedlings are unmistakable and a snap to pull.
On Jun 12, 2004, cindycat from Oklahoma City, OK wrote:
It's obviously a wide-ranging plant, since some of you are growing it in the Pacific Northwest, and I grow it in my dry, sandy part of Oklahoma. It's in a mixed-planting bed that gets full sun and sufficient water, then I've transplanted several pieces to a little drier location. A friend from western Arkansas gave me the start a few years ago. It's the bright fuchsia variety. I didn't know what it was until I was at a garden festival today and asked "Hey, what's that?" That's why I happened to find this nice website, after I Googled "Rose Campion."
For at least fifty years this plant has grown and self-sowed at our home on Puget Sound in Western Washington (the state!). It grew so happily I thought it was a native flower. Imagine my surprise last month when I saw it growing in the perennial gardens at George Washington's home, Mount Vernon in Virginia. Their gift shop sells seeds of Rose Campion (magenta color) as did the gift shop at Thomas Jefferson's home, Monticello (pale pink color). No wonder it is called Heritage Plant.
A well-mannered plant, it is easy to pull out if it is in the wrong spot and will also willingly transplant. To keep them looking neat, I trim off the tall flower stems when they are spent.
Dug up 2 or 3 plants from my mother's yard and they have done very well and are increasing in number each year. I have the magenta ones. They are in full bloom now in mid-May in Norfolk, VA. They grew in my mother's yard for years and years. Does well in all kinds of weather. Handles lots of rain, needs little care. Pinching off dead flowers will extend the blooming time.
On Dec 31, 2003, Flit from Santa Cruz, CA (Zone 9b) wrote:
I have this growing successfully under a birch tree in a part of my yard with poor drainage, where many other plants don't do very well at all -- the soil is sort of clay and slimy there and I haven't done much to fix it, as the birch has very shallow roots so there's no hope of digging. It self-seeds profusely and returns every year. My variant has hot magenta blooms and is very striking.
I've convinced a few plants to grow in a small patch of very dry land that gets a lot of shade, too; the only other things that survive there are an exceptionally persistant cactus, a scrawny lavender, and some weeds or remnant groundcover I haven't managed to identify yet. It's out of easy hose reach so that patch pretty much only gets watered in the winter rains. I'm impressed with this plant's toughness.
Rose Campion does very well on the west coast of Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada. We have an unbelievable amount of annual rainfall, we have gale and hurricane-force winds most of the winter and many plants just can't survive, even though it doesn't often get "cold". Rose Campion, also sometimes called "heritage plant" or "Rose mullein" grows well, spreads from root or seed, and in the past three years seems to have caught the fancy of increasing numbers of gardeners. This plant is sometimes thought to be "invasive" but if you have a vacant lot or some "trashed" area near your house this plant will work wonderfully well to cover the damage and help repair the soil.
I have what I've been told is Rose Campion, although the leaves are green, not silvery in color. I live in Homer, Alaska (zone?) and it is prolific, a hardy self-seeder, and drought resistant. I'm not sure if it is a perenial here, a biannual, or an annual. It took over one flower bed, so I'm in the process of clearing it from that spot and transferring it by transplanting and seeding to a rocky, poor soil spot, where it hopefully will take over.
On Jul 23, 2003, suncatcheracres from Old Town, FL wrote:
I have grown this plant in both the Atlanta area (zone 7b) and now in North Central Florida (zone 8b), and so far it has survived our unusually wet summer, although I have lost it's lookalike "lambs ears" due to all the rain. "Rose campion" is considered an old Southern heirloom plant, and my original plants came from a fellow Master Gardener at a plant swap. It spreads readily, but so far not invasively. It blooms early, when its intense rose-purple color is most welcome, and although the flower is quite small, it really stands out against the intense greens of the early spring garden, and now the wet summer garden. It seems impervious to both pests and disease.
January 1, 2004: Our near 100 inches of rain this year finally got to my Rose Campion, and it started turning black from the constant heat and humidity early this Fall, so I transplanted my remaining three surviving plants to a much sunnier and drier spot, over the septic tank, where they are now flourishing and spreading in this mild Florida winter. I've noticed that my leaves are more green than silver too, as noted here by other gardeners. My three small plants came through out first frosts in the middle of December completely unharmed, and I even have some new baby plantlets, and I'm looking forward to another show of bright magenta flowers this coming Spring.
On Apr 19, 2003, sterhill from Atlanta, GA (Zone 7b) wrote:
In the fall, you can take the overgrown rosettes and divide into dozens of plants. In Atlanta, I have found it very drought tolerant. I have not have too much trouble with it self seeding as some one else mentioned. And it has started blooming now - April 19th!
It makes a good show in the garden as the color is very bold and can be planted around bulbs to hide the yellowing foliage of daffies, blue bells, etc.
On Feb 12, 2003, Greenknee from Chantilly, VA (Zone 6b) wrote:
I collected this years ago from an abandoned homesite, took a few years to identify it. It is almost completely biennial here in zone 7(edge of 6). Reseeds everywhere. Plants in second year thrive, and if deadheaded rigorously, will bloom from early June into November! Silver foliage, rather leggy, but a good contrast in a sunny planter with petunias and vinca minor. Blossom color of the magenta is very intense. White plants are less frilled in foliage and weaker in growth habit.
On Sep 1, 2002, sammyrodg from St.Catharines, ON (Zone 5b) wrote:
Well, I am happy to know the name, it was given to me as I was in need of perennials last spring. It has bloomed a hot pink, I cut the dead flowers off and the second bloom is on now. It is in a contained area so should not have a problem of spreading out of control. Thanks Niagara area of Ont.
On Feb 2, 2001, djh from Arlington, VA (Zone 7a) wrote:
In my area (zone 7, Virginia), this plant self-sows prolifically, so beware! They come up in my lawn. I like the bright pink flowers, so I don't mind too much. I dig them up and move them into the border. But if you're a very neat-and-tidy gardener, you won't like this aspect.
On Jan 1, 2001, gardener_mick from Wentworth, SD (Zone 4a) wrote:
Rose campion is a perennial in zones 3-9. It grows 2-3' tall and should be spaced 12-15" apart. Full sun to light shade is needed. It will tolerate dry soils, but prefers moist, slightly acidic, fertile, and very well drained. The flower colors come in magenta-rose, pink, or white and bloom late spring to early summer. The foliage is silvery green.
Cut back after first bloom to promote a second flowering.
Regional...
This plant has been said to grow in the following regions:
, (2 reports) Auburn, Alabama Cherokee, Alabama Glencoe, Alabama Roanoke, Alabama Sheffield, Alabama Town Creek, Alabama Trinity, Alabama Batesville, Arkansas Clarksville, Arkansas Floral, Arkansas Gravel Ridge, Arkansas , California Alameda, California Arroyo Grande, California Citrus Heights, California Clayton, California Fairfield, California Long Beach, California Los Angeles, California Merced, California Rancho Palos Verdes, California San Jose, California Santa Ana, California Santa Cruz, California Vista, California Bridgeport, Connecticut Old Lyme, Connecticut Torrington, Connecticut Westbrook, Connecticut Pike Creek, Delaware Jacksonville, Florida Old Town, Florida Valparaiso, Florida Aldora, Georgia Braselton, Georgia Cordele, Georgia Dallas, Georgia Dunwoody, Georgia Lizella, Georgia Marietta, Georgia Stone Mountain, Georgia Villa Rica, Georgia Champaign, Illinois Chicago, Illinois Jacksonville, Illinois Mount Prospect, Illinois Washington, Illinois Elkhart, Indiana Fishers, Indiana Galena, Indiana Nashville, Indiana Oak Park, Indiana Ewing, Kentucky Sadieville, Kentucky Bossier City, Louisiana Bowerbank, Maine Cape Elizabeth, Maine Brookeville, Maryland Cresaptown-bel Air, Maryland Amesbury, Massachusetts Billerica, Massachusetts Bridgewater, Massachusetts East Harwich, Massachusetts Hyde Park, Massachusetts Watertown, Massachusetts Belmont, Michigan Ludington, Michigan Waterford, Michigan Minneapolis, Minnesota Mathiston, Mississippi Piedmont, Missouri Greenfield, New Hampshire Hamilton, New Jersey Roswell, New Mexico , New York (2 reports) Bellmore, New York Binghamton, New York Croton-on-hudson, New York Hilton, New York Himrod, New York Hopewell Junction, New York Levittown, New York West Kill, New York Elizabeth City, North Carolina High Point, North Carolina Raleigh, North Carolina Tuxedo, North Carolina Wilsons Mills, North Carolina Winston-salem, North Carolina Belfield, North Dakota Bucyrus, Ohio Columbia Station, Ohio Fruit Hill, Ohio Highland Heights, Ohio Lewis Center, Ohio Perrysburg, Ohio Shelby, Ohio Youngstown, Ohio Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Bowmanville, Ontario Albany, Oregon Baker City, Oregon Gold Hill, Oregon Grants Pass, Oregon Hillsboro, Oregon Klamath Falls, Oregon Portland, Oregon (3 reports) Salem, Oregon Springfield, Oregon Ashley, Pennsylvania East Norriton, Pennsylvania Fullerton, Pennsylvania Greencastle, Pennsylvania Laflin, Pennsylvania Milford, Pennsylvania Penn Wynne, Pennsylvania Middletown, Rhode Island Rumford, Rhode Island Columbia, South Carolina Conway, South Carolina North Augusta, South Carolina Pelzer, South Carolina Sans Souci, South Carolina Saxon, South Carolina Winnsboro, South Carolina Burns, Tennessee Lenoir City, Tennessee Maryville, Tennessee Murfreesboro, Tennessee Oneida, Tennessee Austin, Texas Belton, Texas Eagle Mountain, Texas Farmers Branch, Texas Hudson Oaks, Texas San Antonio, Texas Sunset Valley, Texas Tyler, Texas Winnsboro, Texas Salt Lake City, Utah Chantilly, Virginia Clarksville, Virginia Henrico, Virginia Jolivue, Virginia Lake Monticello, Virginia Leesburg, Virginia Mc Lean, Virginia Norfolk, Virginia Orlean, Virginia South Boston, Virginia Virginia Beach, Virginia Artondale, Washington Bell Hill, Washington Chimacum, Washington Duvall, Washington Eastgate, Washington Friday Harbor, Washington Kalama, Washington Lake Goodwin, Washington Lakewood, Washington Lea Hill, Washington Navy Yard City, Washington North Bend, Washington North Sultan, Washington Seattle, Washington (4 reports) Spokane, Washington Suquamish, Washington Tacoma, Washington Town And Country, Washington Great Cacapon, West Virginia Muscoda, Wisconsin Pewaukee, Wisconsin