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Hypericum androsaemum 'Albury Purple' |
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| Common name |
purple St John's wort |
| Family |
clusiaceae |
| Life cycle |
deciduous shrub (Z5-8) |
| Flowers |
yellow (summer) |
| Size |
2-3' |
| Light |
full sun-part shade |
| Cultural notes |
well-drained garden soil |
From seed  |
germinate at room temperature with exposure to light detailed seed-starting info below
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| Seed ripens | early October |
Plum to purplish-green leaves; bright yellow flowers through summer, followed by red berries. In cold winters, the top-growth may die back to the ground, with new growth emerging from the roots. Even if it doesn't, it's good to prune back hard in spring to encourage flush of new colorful growth. Deer resistant.
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| | Foliage goes to its full dark-purple coloration in fall |
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In our garden, this plant grows in the following areas: side garden, sale plot Seed for this plant is included on my seed trade list One or more images of this plant are included in my stock photo catalog About my plant portraits
PlantLinks to other web pages about Hypericum androsaemum 'Albury Purple'
Some particularly helpful links to other websites
Visitors to this page have left the following comments| carol lade | Jul 27, 2005 | Do you ever have trouble with rust on your Hypericum Albury Purple? Not thus far, Carol |
| roseline glazer | Jun 22, 2006 | i'm not sure how this gorgeous plant turned up near my driveway in a shady wooded area, but it has. it is magnificent and i'd like to get a few more. do you sell your seeds or know where the plants are sold?
thank you.
roseline I've no way of getting back to you, roseline. I do have seed - email me if you're interested. |
| Kat | May 13, 2008 | Can these be placed in pots? I guess they could. If you plan to leave them outside over winter, you probably need to be at least a zone warmer than the coldest listed zone, so zone 6 or 7. |
| Eleanor Hrubesh | May 19, 2009 | I live in Northeast Maryland. Last summer we did landscape that included three Hypericum Androsaemum Albury Purple plants at the base of a weeping cherry. One of them has come up while the other two have not. I did not cut them back in the fall. Should I cut them back now and should they be up by now. Even when the top growth is winter-killed, these plants start pushing up new growth by mid-April in our climate (slightly colder than yours). So yes, they should be up by now. I'm glad you have at least one survivor! |
| Nancy | May 25, 2009 | I have had no luck with the Albury Purple we have replanted them now two years in a row and they do not come back the next year we live in northwest ohio.
Your zone should be similar to ours (depending on how close to the lake you are). I've found Albury Purple to be somewhat finnicky. It definitely does not like to be transplanted, and sometimes just dies in winter or in the process of sending out new growth in early spring. My advice: plant them early in the season, and make sure they do well through summer and fall, so they are well established by the time winter hits. Mulch is probably a good idea. |
- Seed from '01/'02 HPS/MAG exchange. Baggy 70F with light (75%G, 11-50d)
- Same seed as above. Baggy 70F with light (25+%G, 28-45d)
- Same seed as above. Baggy 70F with light (50%G, 12-23d)
- Seed from '04 garden. Baggy 70F with light (28%G, 21-40d)
- Seed from '06 garden. Baggy 70F with light (14%G, 27-43d)
Long-viable seed. Somewhat finnicky as seedlings.
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Last modified:
October 10, 2008
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