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After last week’s post about blue/purple aquilegias, I decided that the pink ones deserved a little attention too. Like the blues and purples, pinks also vary in colouring and add to the interest and diversity of the garden at this time of year. The darkest flowers (above) are my favourites, but the other aquilegias range from those that are just the palest of pinks, like the one below, to medium pinks and others that are closer to red.

Amongst the aquilegia flowers, I was intrigued to see that some of the pale pink flowers had random patches of a darker pink on their petals. Strange! It’s something I’ve seen elsewhere too, but I can’t remember seeing it on other flowers. I wonder if it’s just aquilegias that do this? (Hmm, there must be other flowers that do…) Perhaps it shows how mixed their colour genes are.

Not only do the colours vary in their flowers, the shape can too. You can see how aquilegias got one of their common names from the shape of the double flower below. It does indeed look like an old-fashioned ‘Granny’s Bonnet’. I hope that there will be plenty of seedlings from this year’s aquilegias – I’d love to have a great mix of colours and flower forms again.




















