Liatris spicata 1

Liatris spicata

Button snakewort

£6.99
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At a Glance

Liatris Spicata

Liatris spicata, also known as blazing star or gayfeather, is a bold and elegant perennial with tall, bottlebrush-like flower spikes that bloom from top to bottom. This late-summer favourite adds vertical interest, texture, and a vibrant splash of colour to beds and borders. Easy to grow and loved by pollinators, Liatris spicata is an excellent choice for gardeners seeking long-lasting colour with minimal fuss.

 

Key Features

 

  • Botanical name: Liatris spicata

  • Common names: Blazing star, gayfeather

  • Plant type: Hardy herbaceous perennial

  • Height: 1.5m (5ft)

  • Spread: 45cm (1.5ft)

  • Flowering: Tall, upright spikes of bright purple-pink flowers from August to September

  • Fine, grass-like foliage that stays neat throughout the season

  • Great for cutting and drying – perfect for floral arrangements

  • Highly attractive to bees, butterflies, and other pollinators

  • Hardy: Hardy in the UK down to temperatures of -20 degrees Celcius (RHS hardiness rating H7)

 

Growth & Habit

Liatris spicata grows from a corm-like root system, forming tidy clumps of slender, grassy leaves at the base, with tall flowering spikes that rise dramatically above. Its flowers open from the top down – a unique trait among perennials – and provide weeks of colour and movement in the garden.

 

Planting Advice

  • Position: Best in full sun for strong growth and abundant flowering.

  • Soil: Prefers well-drained soil. It will tolerate poor, sandy, or loamy soil, but avoid heavy, waterlogged conditions.

  • Potted: grown in pots can be planted at any time of the year providing the ground is not frozen or waterlogged

  • Planting Depth: Plant corms about 5–10 cm deep, with the pointed end facing up.

  • Spacing: Space 30–40 cm apart to give room for air flow and expansion.

Plant corms in spring once the soil has warmed up, or plant potted specimens in spring or early autumn.

 

Care & Maintenance

Once established, Liatris spicata is drought-tolerant and requires very little care. Water young plants regularly during dry spells in the first growing season to help roots settle. After that, it will cope well with less frequent watering.

A light mulch in spring helps conserve moisture and suppress weeds, but avoid covering the crown to prevent rot.

 

Pruning Advice

Deadhead regularly then cut stems down to the ground in winter

 

Uses in the Garden

  • Excellent in sunny borders, prairie-style plantings, and wildlife gardens

  • Combines well with grasses, echinacea, rudbeckia, coreopsis, and salvia

  • Perfect for adding height and structure to mid to back-of-border positions

  • Works well in naturalistic and pollinator-friendly planting schemes

  • Suitable for cutting gardens and dried flower arrangements

 

If you’re after a striking, low-maintenance perennial that brings colour, height, and pollinator appeal to the garden, Liatris spicata is a brilliant choice. Its upright form and long flowering period make it a standout performer in sunny borders, and its easy care needs make it perfect for gardeners of all experience levels.

Buying Perennials from Jacksons Nurseries

At Jacksons Nurseries we lightly trim back our perennials after flowering and trim them back at the end of the season to ensure that the plants remain neat and tidy whilst in the pot. The more tender the plant the less we cut back to help protect exposed stems from winter frost. Depending on the plant variety we will then prune back further in spring once the risk of the more severe frosts is over.

As a result, depending on the time of year you buy perennials, they may not look like images showing their ‘prime time’ in flower and looking at their best.

From late autumn onwards and dependent on variety, there may be very little visible above the soil except for a few cut back dormant leaves or stems. It is perfectly normal for dormant plants to look like this from autumn onwards, they will however burst back into life in spring.

Availability: Stock availability figures are provided as a guide only. There is a delay between orders being placed and the plants being gathered by our pulling team. During this time it may be possible for a member of the public to purchase these plants from our Garden Centre, while this is rare it is a possibility and we will notify you of any problems as soon as possible. This figure may also include plants that have not yet be flagged as unsaleable.

Pre-order: Pre-order times are given as a guide only and may vary dependent on the growing season. Orders containing Pre-ordered products will be shipped as a single order when all items become available. Large orders may be part shipped, please contact us on 01782 502741 or email sales@jacksonsnurseries.co.uk.

Perennials are described and classified differently by different gardeners but all would agree that they are plants that come into flower every year from early spring to late summer, the exact time dependent on variety and most die back to ground level in autumn and winter.

As for all plants, soil preparation is time well spent. Dig over the area to be planted ensuring that the ground is free draining. If not then you may wish to either consider planting in a different spot or raising the level of the planting area by adding additional topsoil, well rotted garden compost and/or well rotted manure. Add ‘Fish, Blood and Bone’ fertiliser or a high potash fertiliser to encourage good root growth and development.

It’s always a good idea to plant a few of the same plant together, we recommend planting in 3’s or 5’s to provide a bold effect but allowing them plenty of room to develop.

Always check eventual plant heights when planning borders to ensure that the taller plants are at the back (or at the centre of an island bed) followed by the medium and then smaller low growing plants.

Remember to deadhead perennials after flowering, trim back lightly in autumn as required to tidy the border and if necessary trim again in spring once the risk of heavy frost has passed.

If perennials get too big, start to flower less and less or if it seems to be dying off from the centre, consider dividing the plant but always check that the particular variety is happy to be divided and that you divide at the right time of year for the plant.

By using this simple guide and a little time, perennials can make an absolutely spectacular difference to your garden.

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Liatris spicata 1 9cm pot
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