• Good for edging a shady border or in a rock garden or containers. Deciduous.
  • A lovely elegant colourful ferns for the garden which is low growing mound, spreading slowly over several seasons to form dense colonies providing ground cover in a partially shaded spot in the garden. Provides lovely colour amongst contrasting ferns.
  • Plant in partial to full sun in well drained soil. ... This attractive gray-green fern is great in a rock garden with gritty gravel soil.
  • A little evergreen fern with long narrow, dark green fronds. The fern forms a low narrow mound, suited to rock gardens or edging in a woodland garden.
  • The Upside Down Fern has very attractive foliage, large growing in a moist position or a container.
  • A fern with dark green, glossy fronds with a distinct yellow variegation.
  • Arachniodes davalliaeformis Arachniodes davalliaeformis
    A distinctive and beautiful fern, forms stiff, shiny, almost plastic-like fronds. Evergreen
  • Is a variegated form of the coniogramme family (bamboo fern). Emeiensis is from Mount Emei in China.
  • Out of stock
    A genus of a single species closely related to Cyathea, but is not a true tree fern. Is a native to the Americas from Cuba to Mexico down to southern Chile. A soft foliage with large graceful fronds to 6’ long and blueish silver glaucous beneath makes this a beautiful dramatic fern and a focal point in any garden.
  • This is a compact evergreen fern forming a rosette of blackish-stemmed, pinnate fronds with small, rounded or oblong segments, well-suited to planting in a dry walls.
  • Asplenium scolopendrium 'Undulatum' is also known as the undulating harts tongue fern . This evergreen, hardy fern forms an attractive rosette of rich green fronds, all of which have an intriguing and slightly haphazard appearance, with undulating margins.
  • The Narrow Hart's Tongue fern differs from the plain species, unsurprisingly, by having narrower leaves but also with an undulating margin giving an extremely attractive rippling effect to the plant as a whole. It is also a touch smaller than the species when mature, tolerant and a must for fern collectors.
  • Out of stock
    Adiantum can be deciduous or evergreen ferns with shiny black stalks bearing simple or more usually pinnately divided fronds, the segments fan-shaped, oblong or rounded, carrying spores under reflexed marginal flaps
  • A very pretty clump forming, deciduous fern with delicate, finger like fronds from thin black stem.
  • From the garden of Virginia's Nancy Swell comes this stunning lady fern with silver-white fronds and a decidedly upright habit. Leaves age to light green with new fronds appearing throughout the season. Upright with a beautiful formal appearance that really stands out in the shady garden. This fern really prefers shade and will stand up with all fronds perpendicular to the ground in full sun.
  • Blechnum Chilense is a robust evergreen fern developing into spreading colony which originates from Chile and Argentina.  The new fronds are a decorative bronze colour before turning green.  Grows well in a warm semi-shaded position in a humus rich soil. English and South American import.
  • Attractive charcoal black stems hold pale green leaflets creating fronds 16 cm tall. Eventually increases to form a colony.
  • Fronds pedately divided, pink when young but maturing to very dark green, grows to height of 12”, plant in a sheltered position
  • Deciduous, semi-evergreen or evergreen ferns, with stout, erect or decumbent rhizomes and shuttlecock-like rosettes of lance-shaped to ovate, pinnately divided fronds. Semi-evergreen fern with rosettes of arching, very narrow fronds, crested at the tips.
  • Adiantum aleuticum is very similar to A. pedatum but noticeably different when compared together. Adiantum aleuticum is native to the western half of North America and East Asia. It is a very hardy fern, and, despite its delicate appearance, very tough. 'Imbricatum' is a dwarf selection with green to blue-green foliage and purple wiry rachis. This variety forms a dense clump and is very easy to establish in good humus-rich, moist soil in shade.

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