Crocosmia 'Solfatore'

Crocosmia 'Solfatore'

€4,90
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Crocosmia 'Solfatore'

Crocosmia 'Solfatore'

€4,90

Crocosmia × crocosmiiflora 'Solfatare' has wonderful bronze, iris-like foliage, and soft apricot-yellow flowers on tall stems.

The basal leaves form a quickly spreading basal clump in the springtime - this can occupy almost half a meter after a few years of development and if the spot is just right.

The flowers are incredible - apricot-peach-yellow buds opening into star shaped flowers held high on dark slightly arching stems. 

The leaves are sword-shaped, pleated and veined, with a strong bronzy-caramely tint, particularly at the base.

Fun Fact: 

The plant's storage organ is a corm — a sort of klind of -bulb formed from a swollen stem surrounded by papery scales. This allows for Crocosmias to survive the periods of drought in the homelands (winter in South Africa).


☀️Plant in full sun in groups of 10 - the splash of color will melt the winter blues away instantly!

💦The soil should remain moist/fertile throughout the summer > invest in miscanthus or pine bark mulch, it's a life changer

Frost Tolerance -12°C

Gardening Tips:

☀️Drought Tolerant
💦Requires some summer moisture

The Botany:

This is a hybrid of a Montbretia variety that has been around for over 100 years, selected in France in 1887.

Floral Morphology 

The flowers of Crocosmia × crocosmiiflora 'Solfatare' are zygomorphic — that is, symmetrical along a single plane — and composed of six tepals arranged in two whorls of three, the inner and outer petals forming a loosely star-shaped, funnel-like bloom approximately 4 cm in diameter.

The warm apricot-yellow perianth tube opens outward into spreading, slightly reflexed lobes. Stamens and style project forward from the tube, facilitating contact with visiting pollinators.

Flowers are arranged in a distichous, branched spike — a cincinnus — with individual blooms opening in sequence from the base upward over several weeks, maximising the pollination window.

Ecology 

Native to the grasslands, scrub margins and stream banks of South Africa, Crocosmia evolved in environments with warm, moist summers and dry winters — conditions that shaped its corm-based storage strategy, allowing it to survive seasonal drought underground.

Its tubular, brightly coloured flowers are adapted for pollination by long-tongued insects and, in its native range, sunbirds. In European gardens it is visited primarily by bumblebees and hoverflies.

Where conditions suit it — sunny, fertile, well-drained soil with adequate summer moisture — it spreads vigorously via stolons connecting successive corms, forming dense, naturalised colonies.

In some mild, humid regions such as western France and the British Isles, it has naturalised so successfully in the wild as to be considered locally invasive.

The Myths:

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