Skip to Content
Home / Perennials / Lupine / Lupine Gallery Mix

Lupine Gallery Mix

SKU: AM014355
$9.98
per Plant - 3" Pot
Shipping:
No longer available this season.
Overview
Lupine Gallery Mix is the secret behind growing the iconic multi-colored quilt of lupines seen on roadsides. Compact plants produce 18" tall spires, densely loaded with pea-shaped flowers that open from bottom to top in shades of yellow, pink, red, and indigo. Naturalizes readily. (Lupinus)
key features
Botanical Name
Lupinus
Advantages
Attracts Hummingbirds, Deer Resistant, Small Spaces
Growing Zones
Zone 4, Zone 5, Zone 6, Zone 7, Zone 8
Light Requirements
Full Sun, Half Sun / Half Shade
Soil Moisture
Average
Mature Height
18-24" tall
Mature Spread
15-18" wide
Bloom Time
Early to mid summer
SKU
AM014355

Description

Everybody loves lupines. And most lupine species are American wildflowers. From coast to coast they are loved...the famous Pacific coast lupines, the Texas Bluebonnet, and the widespread Wild Blue Lupine of the eastern US.

But when it comes to hybrids, there is really only one group--the world-famous Russell Lupines. They were created by crossing several lupine species, most notably blue L. polyphyllus, a native of the Pacific Northwest. By careful hybridization and years of work, a man named George Russell in England perfected the multicolored strains in 1937, and they've been the standards ever since.

The Gallery Hybrids are considered a dwarf form, since many lupines are very tall plants. Gallery Hybrids grow to only about 18 in an endless array of colors and bi-colors.

Growing Lupines These prized plants are not hard to grow, and in fact, many of the wild species are permanent features in wildflower meadows. (See our Individual Species List for seeds of several native species including Texas Bluebonnet.)

The Russell Hybrids are a bit more fussy. They are best where soils are rich and conditions are cool. In zones 4 and 5 they are fine, but considered a short-lived perennial, even in New England. From Zone 6 south, they grow beautifully, but are hard to preserve and should be planted as annuals.

One of my favorite perennial author/experts, Alan Armitage, says, Flowers more perfect than those of the lupine hybrids are difficult to imagine.