#lesser periwinkle

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 Vinca minor — lesser periwinkle a.k.a. dwarf periwinkle

Vinca minor — lesser periwinkle a.k.a. dwarf periwinkle


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anskupics: Vinca minor — lesser periwinkle a.k.a. dwarf periwinkle

anskupics:

Vinca minor — lesser periwinkle a.k.a. dwarf periwinkle


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Vinca minor, ApocynaceaeLesser periwinkle was another of the groundcover species I found in the lighVinca minor, ApocynaceaeLesser periwinkle was another of the groundcover species I found in the lighVinca minor, ApocynaceaeLesser periwinkle was another of the groundcover species I found in the ligh

Vinca minor, Apocynaceae

Lesser periwinkle was another of the groundcover species I found in the lightly shaded dry ditch running along a row of Lombardy poplars (Populus nigra ‘Italica’) edging a field. 

This creeping evergreen plant native to much of Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean region is a beauty in the spring and early summer months, with its propeller-shaped flowers in a particular shade of violet-blue -which has given the name to the periwinkle colour- poking through the dark, leathery foliage. 

Although its vigorous habit and ability to thrive in most soils can make it an invasive species in the wrong place, it is a really valuable ornamental plant and numerous cultivars have been selected. Here are three currently in bloom at the garden centre where I work:  

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V. minor ‘Ralph Shugert’, named after the Michigan nurseryman who selected it, has large flowers and variegated foliage, with a thin creamy-yellow edge and veining. Some shoots grow completely albino. 

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V. minor ‘Illumination’, with foliage splashed with chartreuse-yellow, often taking the entire centre of the leaf. A good groundcover plant to brighten up a shadier corner where not much else grows well. 

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V. minor ‘Atropurpurea’, as the name suggests, produces flowers in a darker, warmer shade of purple contrasting well with the glossy green foliage.   


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