Collection: Tall Perennials

If your beds are lacking height, you need tall perennial plants! Growing up to two metres in some cases, these striking plants create a colourful backdrop to any floral display, helping make the most of the space, even in small gardens. Tall perennials look fantastic contrasted with green foliage, in a layered herbaceous border or in containers all on their own.

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Hereford

Meet Jack

Perennials born in Herefordshire, blooming in your garden

Our perennials start life in the rolling Herefordshire hills, where Jack and his team trial over 250 new varieties each year to bring you the best performing and most sustainable plants in the UK. With over forty years of excellence, it’s no surprise that they’ve won the HTA Plant Grower of the Year award two years running.

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  Tall perennials for borders

Tall perennials for borders

Perennial plants are ideal for giving height and structure to the back of a mixed border, providing a colourful vertical backdrop for smaller plants - but there are so many other ways they can be used. Plant them in groups for a dense hit of colour, or use as single accents amongst medium-sized plants for a less formal cottage garden style scheme. Tall perennials are also perfect if you want to screen a less than attractive wall or fence; they’re quicker to grow than trees and easier to maintain than a climber.


  Tall perennials for pots

Tall perennials for pots

Tall perennials really shine in a container display. Give them pride of place in the middle of your pot and surround them with more compact, upright and trailing varieties, or make a statement by packing the pot with one species or colour. Use your perennial plants to give height and variation to a collection of containers on the patio or place them at either side of your front door as a colourful alternative to a pair of lollipop trees.


  Which are the tallest perennial plants?

Which are the tallest perennial plants?

If you want jaw-dropping height, you need hollyhocks! These stunning flowers grow on strong stems up to 2m tall. Close behind them are delphiniums at up to 1.7m, then foxgloves, achillea, verbena and gladioli which all come in at around the 1m mark.


  Caring for tall perennials

Caring for tall perennials

Tall perennials can be at risk of bending or falling over in the wind. To prevent this, make sure you plant them in a sheltered part of your garden - against a fence is ideal. For extra support, plant in groups or amongst other tall plants. You can also tie them in to a stake or support structure - using fallen tree branches helps to give a natural look, or you can use rows of string nailed to a fence. Tie your plants in quite loosely to allow for growing space.

Tall Perennials FAQs

What are some examples of tall perennials?

There are a great number of different tall perennial species out there, from the woodland spires of foxgloves to happy-hued hollyhocks. Lovely lupins, dreamy delphiniums and fabulous verbenas are all guests at the tall perennial party, too. You didn’t get invited? Must have been lost in the post…

How high can tall perennials grow?

Plant height varies from species to species, and even from variety to variety. Hollyhocks are known to grow up to a staggering 2.5m, while delphiniums tend to come in at around the 1-1.8m mark. Foxgloves and lupins can also grow to 1m in height (and sometimes even taller).

Where should you plant tall perennials?

There are three main options you can consider when it comes to planting tall perennial plants. The first is to plant them at the back of the border, with medium and shorter plants layered in front, respectively. This enables your tallest plants to act as a backdrop against which other plants in the bed can shine. Alternatively, you can plant a tall perennial in a large pot for the patio, or en masse in a flower bed dedicated to tall perennials, helping to create a ‘sea’ of colour. Remember, certain tall perennials (like delphiniums and hollyhocks) need staking.

How far apart should you plant tall perennials?

Tall perennials tend to direct most of their energies into growing upwards, rather than outwards, so you can get away with planting most taller perennials quite close to one another. While it’s important to check a plant’s specific space requirements, most tall perennials can be planted around one-third of the plant’s individual height away from the next plant.

Do tall perennials need extra support?

For the very tallest perennials, or if you live in a particularly windy location, staking your plants and tying them in can stop stems snapping or a plant collapsing under its own, top-heavy weight.

What conditions do tall perennials like?

Most tall flowering perennial plants prefer moist but well-drained soil with decent levels of fertility. If you know your soil is poor, consider amending it with some well-rotted manure. In terms of light, full sun is best but partial shade is tolerable (though flowering might not be so impressive).

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