Kniphofia northiae (Giant red hot poker) will reach a height of 1.5m and a spread of 0.9m after 2-5 years. Architectural, Beds and borders, City, Coastal, Cottage/Informal, Gravel, Low Maintenance, Mediterranean, Wildlife. Prefers loam or sandy soil enriched with humus but will tolerate any deep, moist but well. Kniphofia, also sometimes called Tritoma, Red Hot Poker, Torch Lily or Poker Plant, is a genus of plants in the family Xanthorrhoeaceae, that includes 70 or more species native to Africa. Some species have been commercially used horticulturally, and are commonly known for their bright, rocket-shaped flowers.
1 x Kniphofia Popsicle 2L pots - available in 5 colour options!
Out of stock £5.95 Kniphofia also known as Red Hot Poker, Tritoma, Torch lilies or Poker plants. These Poker plants produce clumps of grassy foliage and tall curious flower spikes that resemble a rocket flame in spectacular glowing shades for years to come! Buy red hot poker Kniphofia uvaria - Scarlet buds and bright orange, torch-like flowers: 2 litre pot: £16.99 Delivery by Crocus We use cookies to provide you with a better service and experience. Carry on browsing if you're happy with this, or find out how to manage cookies.
Colourful and exotic-looking, red-hot pokers flower over many months and make spectacular garden plants. They do well in coastal gardens and can be very long-lived.
Kniphofia Lemon Popsicle is a compact Red Hot Poker with a delicious, citrusy twist. This hardy and vibrant Kniphofia will flower all through summer and well into autumn, making it a must have for the border. Tubular lemon drop flowers bloom from the base upwards forming impressive, almost luminous flower spikes.
Orange Vanilla Popsicle is a two-toned beauty with flower spikes of red-orange over the creamy-white on the bottom in abundance throughout the summer and early autumn.
Mango Popsicle has flowers that appear on tall poker like spikes from early summer through to late autumn in a bright orange/mango colour.
Papaya Popsicle bears beautiful bi-colour red-orange and yellow spikes of flowers in abundance throughout the summer and early autumn.
Red Hot Poker Plant For Sale Uk Gumtree
Pineapple Popsicle is a hybrid kniphofia that produces ornamentally impressive cream to pineapple-yellow flowers in 7” long racemes (to 100 densely packed flowers per raceme) atop 26” tall flower scapes rising above a 14” tall basal clump of strap-shaped, medium green leaves.
By Whatsaplant
Surrey, United Kingdom
Red Hot Poker plants - Kniphofia
I have more than one of these in my front garden but only two have really 'grown' to the point where the main stem of the tallest is about 6 foot high. My problem is that all, or virtually all, of the flowers have disappeared. My gardener says this is probably down to birds. My research says they are very popular with hummingbirds. I wasn't aware that we had any hummingbirds in Britain. Then I saw a picture somewhere else where the main stem (flowerless) looked much the same as mine. But that person seemed to suggest that the flowers just dropped off after a very short space of time. I have rigged up a sort of bird-scarer, but it's a bit of a waste of time unless I've got a bird that can hover.
Has anybody got any thoughts?
- 25 Jun, 2012
Answers
Can I ask whether you got any flowers at all this year, or whether the stem came up 'blind'?
There are still flowers on one of the stems so my answer would have to be 'Yes', but how many is another question.
For various reasons, I don't necessarily go out at the front of the house every day. But I can't recall having seen a whole 'head' of flowers. On the main stem there are shrivelled whiteish 'leaves' extending down the top approx. 2 foot of the stem.
I noticed that the Kniphofia we have here did something similar - it flowered, but the flower didn't last very long. The leaves, though, seem fine. These plants are prone to thrips infestation, but it seems unlikely its that because that's usually when the weather's hot and dry, which clearly, it hasn't been. In which case, I'd put it down to the weather this year - flowering on some plants is either late, aborted, or poor. Not all, but some, and Kniphofia likes full sun and light soil - perhaps the cold temperatures, dark days and rain have taken their toll this year.
I bought a lemon coloured version last year and I can confirm that birds LOVED the flowers. No idea what is in them but it's obviously very tasty. We have some regular red hot pokers and they haven't been touched (fantastic show this year!). But I'll be keeping an eye on the lemon one when it flowers later this year as it was whittled down in a day and the birds literally fought over it!
The snails in my garden love them too (the small lemon version I have anyway.)
If only the birds would just eat the snails our lemon Kniphofias would be safe :-)
birds like the blue tits etc, love the nectar in the base of the flower.
but I agree why cant they go for the greenfly etc?
Slugs and snails ate any yellow ones I've planted. If you are growing red/orange ones....split them every 3 years or so. Mine are best of all this year, but flowers not long lasting.
No hummingbirds east of the Atlantic or west of the Pacific, but--just for the record--they don't remove flowers, just sip from them! : )
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