Its flowering power and versatile use makes Phlox a wonderful garden plant!
Bring more variety to your garden with this phlox mix in pretty colours. The phlox plants do best in sun or semi-shade.
Read morePhlox paniculata ‘Red Riding Hood’ (Butterfly flower). Blooms with large cherry-red panicles, in July-Sept. Has wonderfully fragrant flowers!
Read moreThese pretty phlox plants bloom in the months of July to September with brilliant purple/lilac flowers. Phlox plants like sun to semi-shade.
Read moreThis phlox is an attractive plant for the garden with its white/pink flowers and is excellent to combine with sedum, among others.
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The phlox is a true summer plant, so it may get a nice place in the sun. This gorgeous phlox comes in various colours.
Read morePhlox plants are hardy and do best in sun and semi-shade. It is also a beautiful cut flower. The phlox is available in various colours.
Read morePhlox seed planting instructions
Rich, loose, well-drained soil
Phlox seed can either be planted directly in a flower bed or sown indoors and planted out later. Plant your Phlox seed in rich, loose, well-drained soil. If necessary, you can add peat moss or perlite to improve drainage. Add a general fertiliser to the soil where the Phlox seeds are planted and then repeat this every month.
Water generously
After planting your Phlox seeds, water the soil generously. Once your Phlox is growing, keep the soil moist to slightly dry. During dry periods, water once or twice a week.
Full sun
Phlox prefers full sun, but also tolerates light shade.
Too much shade will result in a tall but skinny plant. Phlox will benefit when grown in a well-ventilated location, as this will help against mildew. If necessary, treat the plant with a fungicide. Keep the space around the Phlox about 20 to 25cm clear.
Phlox care instructions
Remove spent flowers to encourage new blooms and extend the flowering period. Capping will also improve the appearance of your Phlox. In late autumn, Phlox should be able to survive a few light night frosts, but the foliage will quickly wilt and disappear. When this happens, cut the stems down to 5cm from the ground. Your Phlox will then re-emerge in spring.
Hardy Phlox will spread and develop into large bunches over time. These bunches can be divided by cutting them in half with a sharp shovel. The resulting pieces can then be replanted elsewhere in the garden, or handed out to friends. You can divide the plant in autumn, every 3 or 4 years.
Our Phlox seed, like all our other products, comes with detailed planting instructions.