Gardening Magazine

Plant of the Week: Tiarella Wherryi

By Davis Landscape Architecture @DavisLandArch

Tiarella wherryi Flower (05/05/2012, Kew Gardens, London)

Tiarella wherryi Flower (05/05/2012, Kew Gardens, London)

Position: Partial to full shade

Flowering period: Late spring to early summer

Soil: Moist, well drained

Eventual Height: 40 cm

Eventual Spread: 50 cm

Hardiness: 3a – 9a

Family: Saxifragaceae

Tiarella wherryi is a slow growing, clump forming herbaceous perennial. Its  pale green leaves are palmate, deeply lobed with dentate margins, becoming tinged with maroon as they mature and are up to 10cm long and across. Its white to pink flowers are up to 6mm across and appear in racemes on slender spikes. Its has a crown shaped fruit. Its roots are rhizomatous but do not produce runners, so this plant does not spread from its roots.

Tiarella wherryi, commonly known as Foamflower, is native to North America. Tiarella wherryi is synonymous with Tiarella cordifolia var. collina.

The etymological root of the binomial name Tiarella is derived from the Greek tiara ’a turban’, refering to the shape of the seed pod. Wherryi is named after Dr. Edgar T. Wherry (1885 – 1982) an American mineralogist and botanist who discovered the species.

Tiarella wherryi (05/05/2012, Kew Gardens, London)

Tiarella wherryi (05/05/2012, Kew Gardens, London)

The landscape architect may find Tiarella wherryi useful as an effective low growing herbaceous ground cover plant. It is also useful in dappled shade location including woodland settings. Rabbits and deer tend not to eat this plant.

Ecologically, T. wherryi is attractive to bees and pollinating insects.

The Royal Horticultural Society has given T. wherryi their prestigious Award of Garden Merit in 1993.

T. wherryi prefers moist, humus rich, well-drained soils. It tolerates most pH of soil. It will not tolerate waterlogged soils.

T. wherryi requires little maintenance. Large clumps may be divided in early spring.


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