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Great Plants this Month Summer

Lathyrus latifolius AGM

broad-leaved everlasting pea

Profile image of Louise Sims
Louise Sims

Thirty five years ago when we moved to our present house, it was our wish and our ambition to make and to grow a garden from scratch. We were lucky enough to inherit a blank canvas with very few existing features and even fewer garden-worthy plants, but the one that was there, and  remains with us to this day, is the everlasting pea. 

As I so often do, I decided to find out what my gardening guru Christopher Lloyd had to say about it and he starts off “The everlasting pea, Lathyrus latifolius, has no scent and should not as it often is, be called everlasting sweet pea.” He goes on to describe it as a “staunch perennial climber that dies down in winter and grows to 2m-3m in summer” and its colour as “a villainous mauvy- pink”. You have to laugh at that – he’s spot on as always!

Like so many plants, after our wet, wet winter, it has excelled itself this year, and the sight of it scrambling through the silver-leaved sea holly ‘Miss Willmott’s Ghost’, and weaving around the tall stems of the delightful lemon yellow Cephalaria gigantea exactly sums up the abundance and random beauty of the summer border. 

It spreads by underground rhizomes and the neat and tidy gardener who likes to be in control might call it mildly invasive, but for me I’d hate to be without it.

NB Louise has published a beautifully produced book of her plant profiles – A Plant for Each Week of the Year. It costs £9.99 and is for sale in our online shop here.

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By the3growbags

We're three sisters who love gardening, plants and even the science of horticulture but we're not all experts. We'd love everyone even remotely interested in their gardens to be part of our blogsite.

One reply on “Lathyrus latifolius AGM”

My favourite plant for beautiful foliage is artemisia Powys castle – which looks particularly fabulous beside dark crimson or bronze flowers and shrubs. I have one next to a small cotinus and another by bronze flag irises – wonderful!

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