It’s fall, and that means many Cyclamen start blooming or sending up their beautifully patterned leaves! I have become somewhat obsessed with growing Cyclamen either from seed or purchasing them from a few good growers. In the past few weeks they are all showing some sort of new leafy growth or popping up their delicate looking flowers. I have read many times that most ‘hardy’ Cyclamen won’t grow here, but I can tell you they grow just fine here in zone 4-5 Vermont!
The following have all been grown outside in my gardens for at least one year. Some are from seed I obtained through the seed-ex of the North American Rock Garden Society, the American Primrose Society or from John Lonsdale and Plant Delights Nursery.
Give them a well drained soil with a little bit of sun and they are happy! Plant the corms about 1″ deep and cover with a gritty soil mix so the corm stays dry over winter. They are glorious almost all year sending up fabulous new leaves late summer & fall. C. hederifolium bloom now, while the C. coum blooms in early spring. The all silvered leaf plant above is C. purpurescens which blooms in mid-summer.
Most will self sow when happy and you can see in the second to last photo that C. coum is very happy! I have seedlings coming up all over that bed!
There are also a few non-hardy types for the sunny windowsill. While the common C. persicum can be found almost everywhere now you should give a few of the rarer ones a try. Most need to be started from seed which can be found on many of the specialist plant society seed exchanges or purchased from a few specialty growers such as Arrowhead Alpines you can see they even use a cyclamen leaf in the title of the nursery!
Here are a few of the plants I have started from seed or bought in already potted. The first is C. graecum a lovely thing I got from John Lonsdale with fantastic leaves. The second is the same but one I grew from seed. The third is C. rohfsianum that I picked up at a chapter meeting of NARGS a couple of years ago grown by a friend who says his has over 75 flowers on it this year! Mine hasn’t flowered for the past two years!! Don’t know what I’m doing wrong here but the leaves are lovely to look at anyway. The last is a C. pseudibericum also from John. It has the one flower on it this year and will be sending up beautifully marked leaves very soon. I have them all in a sunny east facing window. During the summer they are pretty much in a dormant state outside with no watering except what nature gives them. I repot them every 2 years or so and topdress them with a pretty gravel mix.
Please gives these beauties a try. They are so rewarding!
Thanks for stopping by…..please leave me a comment and let me know about your adventures with the fabulous Cyclamen!
Beautiful site. Have a nice day.
Thanks Harald. Growing Cyclamen is such fun and I’m learning which ones are hardy for me. I love growing them from seed, so if you ever want to do a seed swap let me know!
thanks for stopping by
I am also quite new in growing Cyclamen, but already I am hooked. Love your great pictures!
Thanks so much Lene! It is an addiction from which we will never need curing of!
You’ve got an excellent collection there, I love it! Growing them in containers is still kind of iffy for me, but the ones in the ground have been doing well. I don’t think you can ever have too many 😉
Frank
Hey Frank, Thanks for stopping by. Growing Cyclamen from seed is interesting. Kind of like a box of chocolates…you never know what you’ll get! 😛
The ones I keep in containers get overwintered in a sunny window or in the basement….so I would give them another try, just don’t overwater.
I love all Cyclamen – especially at this time of year when everything else starts going down the hill, they look at their best. And so many leaf patterns – starting from seeds you could even select a few new varieties.
I love them too! And now experimenting with hardiness on a few varieties that I didn’t think would winter outdoors here.
So you saw that I was poking around your blog this morning? You have so many wonderful plants at the nursery…I wish I lived closer….I’m about an 8 hour drive away.
I’ve been lusting after Podophyllum ‘Spotty Dotty’, but can’t really justify the expense of a mature plant, so I am starting a few of the more exotic types from seed in hopes of getting a good mottled leaf form. It turns out they are really easy from seed, so there’s hope!
Well, 8 hours is not that much – maybe next year… Thanks for the follow. The Spotty Dotty we have for sale are really small size, they don’t increase well in pots – so don’t feel sorry. Except P. pleianthum we don’t have other Podophyllum seeds here, although I would love some P. delavayi or others. You are right they are not hard to grow from fresh seeds. (had a short stop at your knitt shop -awesome pieces)