Rodgersia

These are spectacular architectural plants, great for cool, shady, damp places. In spring they send up their stems from spreading clumps, from which leaves, often bronze at first, unfurl in a range of interesting shapes - pinnate or palmate in the case of rodgersias, a single large round leaf in the closely related Astilboides. The flowers are tiny, massed on tall plumes, rather like those of the related astilbes, white or pink. And then, for good measure, the leaves in most cases go a rich bronze colour again in autumn.
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  • Award of Garden Merit
  • Yes
  • Associated with George Forrest
  • Yes

Rodgersia aesculifolia

Fluffy panicles of masses of tiny, starry, white or pink flowers.
£10.00

Rodgersia pinnata 'Chocolate Wing'

Chocolate-bronze leaves, becoming dark green, and a froth of pink flowers.
£12.00

Rodgersia pinnata 'Elegans'

Bold, pinnate coppery leaves and elegant spikes of soft pink to creamy flowers.
£10.00

Rodgersia pinnata 'Maurice Mason'

Bristly, pinnate leaves and a froth of pink flowers.
£10.00

Rodgersia pinnata 'Superba'

Woodland plant with bristly pinnate leaves and a froth of pink flowers.
£11.00

Rodgersia podophylla

Large leaves, bronze in spring, dark green in summer, red in autumn.
£10.00