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La Campanella. 1965 (Blackwell). Semi-double. Tube pale pink. Sepals white with pink flush. Corolla purple changing to lavender as blooms age. Delightful plant with masses of little flowers. Makes a good basket.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

PHLadyBoothby

Lady Boothby. (Hardy) 1939 (Raffill) Single. Tube and Sepals crimson. Corolla blackish purple. One of the fastest growing fuchsias we know. A “Climbing fuchsia”. Can be trained to 4-5ft in one season.
H.3. £4.00

 

 

PHLadyInBlack

Lady in Black (Hardy) 2012. Tube and Sepals Vivid Red. Corolla Extremely dark blue/black. A “Climbing” fuchsia. Large double blooms.
H3 £4.00

 

 

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Lady Isobel Barnet. 1971 (Gadsby). Single. Tube and Sepals rosy red. Corolla pale purple, veined rose. Flowers extremely well and makes an excellent show plant when well grown. Vigorous, blooms over a long period.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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Lambada. 1993 (Gotz - Holland) Semi-double. Tube/sepal pale pink. Corolla imperial purple. Small flowers, compact. Excellent for training as a mini pillar or standard. Thoroughly recommended.
H2 £3.50

 

 

Phlaura

Laura. 1985 (Dutch). Single. Tube and Sepals light orange. Corolla reddish-orange. Medium sized blooms, freely produced, very dark green foliage heavily serrated, strong upright grower, well suited to standard growing .
H.2. £3.50

 

 

PHLena

Lena. (Hardy) 1862 (Bunney). Semi-double. Tube and Sepals flesh pink. Corolla rosy-purple. Flowers largish, very free. This fuchsia is good in any form. Grows well outside. With spreading growth. Recommended. 1½-2½ft (45-75cm).
H.3. £3.00

 

 

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Lena Dalton. 1953 (Reimer). Double. Sepals pink. Corolla light blue with rose pink flush. Will produce compact plant well covered in blooms.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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L’Enfante Prodigue. (Hardy) Semi-double. Tube and Sepals cerise. Corolla royal purple. Flowers small, very free, ideally suited for outdoors. 3½-4½ft (1-1.35m).
H.3. £3.00

 

 

PHLeonora

Leonora. 1960 (Tiret). Single. Tube and Sepals pink. Corolla pink, bell shaped. Medium size flower. Very pleasing.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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Leverhulme. 1928 (Hartnauer) Single. Triphylla type, longish tube, rosy cerise self. Dark bushy foliage.
H.2. £3.50

 

 

PHLondon2000

London 2000. 2000 (Weston) Single. Tube & sepals white. Corolla cyclamen purple turning to cerise when mature. Vigorous upright growth. Suitable for containers. Excellent for training into small standards and fans. Certainly show class fuchsia.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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Lord Roberts. 1909 (Lemoine). Single. Tube and Sepals palish scarlet. Corolla purple violet. Flowers medium large, freely produced on upright bush.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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Lottie Hobby. (Hardy) 1839 (Edwards). Single. Tube dull scarlet. Sepals similar tipped with rose. Corolla scarlet. Very small flowers, freely produced, small glossy foliage, upright. Looks like species but is a breviflorae hybrid. Hardy in most places. 3-4ft (90cm-1.2m).
H.3. £3.50

 

 

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Loveliness. 1869 (Lye). Single. Tube and Sepals waxy white. Corolla rosy-cerise. Flowers medium, very free. Grows upright bushy.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

PHLovesReward

Loves Reward. 1986 (Bambrick) Single. Tube and Sepals white. Corolla pale violet blue. Very floriferous, flowers held well out on top of foliage. Makes excellent compact, short jointed plant. Suitable for Show work. H.2. £3.50

 

 

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Lye's Unique. 1886 (Lye). Single. Tube and Sepals waxy-white. Corolla salmon-orange. Medium sized blooms, very free growth, upright bush. Very strong.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

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Lynette. 1981 (Holmes). Double. Tube and Sepals rich red. Corolla white, blotched red. Flowers extremely well, showy plant, Medium height.
H.2. £3.00

 

 

 

PLEASE NOTE FOR WINTER MONTHS:

 H.1. requires greenhouse heated to minimum of 40°F (4.5°C).
 H.2. requires a cool greenhouse - half hardy.
 H.3. denotes the plant is hardy. The heights printed on the H3 varieties in this catalogue are an approximate guide to help your selection and planting layout and is the approximate height expected in the second growing season after a normal winter.

Although the above classifications are our recommendations, many of our customers are growing fuchsias that we classify as H.2 out of doors with good results and obviously with bigger blooms produced on H.2's than on
H.3's. It may be worth a try, the first winter being where greatest care is required (a good covering of peat is always beneficial).

The RHS and the British Fuchsia Society list many fuchsias that we classify as H2 medium hardy, as H3 hardy and with the climate changes (Global warming) this has probably become a fact
 

 

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P       Q       R       S       T       U/V       W       Species       Hardies      
Small Flowered

All plants in this list are priced for a plant in a peat block for mail order.
If collected from the nursery they will be in 3-inch pots.
Larger plants are usually available.

 

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A       B       C       D       E       F       G       H       I       J       K       L       M       N       O       P

Q       R       S       T       U/V       W       Species       Hardies       
Small Flowered