Dianthus 'Cranmere Pool'
Hardy garden pink 'Cranmere Pool'
'Cranmere Pool' forms an evergreen mound of foliage that will produce pale pink, almost white, double blooms, each with a deep cranberry coloured centre. Perfect for growing in borders, alpine gardens and containers.
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Full sun to partial shade
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Very little water
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Frost Hardy: 23F (-5°C)
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Free draining and fertile
Common name
Hardy garden pink 'Cranmere Pool'
Latin name
Dianthus 'Cranmere Pool'
type
Perennial
family
Caryophyllaceae
ph
6.0 - 7.0 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
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Best time to plant
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When the plant will bloom
full grown dimensions
Dianthus 'Cranmere Pool'
'Cranmere Pool' forms an evergreen mound of foliage that will produce pale pink, almost white, double blooms, each with a deep cranberry coloured centre. Perfect for growing in borders, alpine gardens and containers.
Flowering
From Mid Summer TO Early Autumn
Dianthus generally bloom from mid-summer, through to early autumn.
Planting Outdoors
From Mid Spring TO Late Spring
Plant out pot grown plants into flowering position make sure there is plenty of air circulating around them.
Propagation by seed
From Late Winter TO Early Spring
Sow seeds under glass ready for planting out when the last frost has gone.
Propagation by seed outside
From Mid Spring TO Early Summer
Sow seeds 1/8th of an inch below the surface of the soil, keep moist till they are sprouting vigorously. They will probably not flower until the following year.
Propagation by cuttings
From Mid Spring TO Early Summer
Take soft tip cuttings in spring to early summer. Cleanly cut up to a 10 cm long stems, remove lower leaves and pinch the tip out, dip the stem into rooting hormone, fill a container/pot with suitable compost, make holes around the edge of it and plant the cuttings, water in well, cover with a polythene bag and place somewhere warm, lake the bag off twice a week to air the cuttings. Keep the cuttings moist until well rooted.Harden off when well rooted and pot on into individual pots increasing the airing to let the leaves to develop. Remove rotten, dying or dead cuttings regularly.