Agapanthus [Silver Moon] = 'Notfred'
Approx. 0.5 litre pot
About this cultivar:
Agapanthus [Silver Moon] = 'Notfred' is an awfully gaudy, semi deciduous, amazingly prolific flowering variety with bicoloured blue and white flowers above variegated leaves. A 2001 introduction, love it or hate it, the RHS love it and gave it their Award of Garden Merit in 2017. Seems to vary in size quite a bit and the variegation can revert now and then...
- Position: Full sun, partial shade (better in full sun, but ours is on the North side of our house!)
- Soil: Almost any soil
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Flowers: July, August, September
- Other features: Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (RHS AGM), Bees and Butterflies
- Hardiness: H5 - Hardy in most places throughout the UK even in severe winters (-15 to -10°C), Fully hardy
- Habit: Clump forming
- Foliage: Deciduous
- Height: 30 to 75 cm (1 - 2.5 ft)
- Spread: 30 to 60 cm (1 - 2 ft)
- Time to full growth: 5 to 10 years
- Plant type: Herbaceous Perennial
- Colour: Blue, purple, green, white
- Goes well with: Achillea, Coreopsis, Crocosmia, Hemerocallis,, Kniphofia,and Stipa tenuissima. We like to experiment with blue-on-blue (Eryngium and Agapanthus!) or blue on white (White Hydrangea and Agapanthus).
About this genus:
Agapanthus (lily-of-the-nile) is a South-African perennial genus that is known for being a fantastic summer-flowering, butterfly-attracting perennial - our second best selling plant is Agapanthus! At Ballyrobert we've trialed many cultivars to find what we think are the best performers out there.
Agapanthus forms clumps with strap-like leaves which in the summer produce stems ending with with large circular arrangements of trumpet-like flowers. The clump-size, stem-length, flower colour and foliage can vary depending on the cultivar. Flower colours can vary from light to dark purple, light to dark blue, grey to white, and even bicolour. The foliage can range from evergreen to semi-evergreen to deciduous.
Agapanthus tend to prefer full-sun but will also grow in part shade. They tend to be quite drought tolerant. Some Agapanthus are supposed to be tender. We don't sell those ones here! All the cultivars we sell have been tested in our own garden over a number of years. We've found them to be tough, fully hardy, low maintenance plants perfect for a wide range of gardens. Unsurprising since they are native to South Africa - a place of wildly varying habits.
Agapanthus combine well with other sun-lovers and/or lily-type plants. You can try: Achillea, Coreopsis, Crocosmia, Hemerocallis, Kniphofia, and Stipa tenuissima. We like to experiment with blue-on-blue (Eryngium and Agapanthus!) or blue on white (White Hydrangea and Agapanthus)