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On Gardening: Wedgwood Pink a most anticipated new flower

Norman Winter, Tribune News Service on

Published in Lifestyles

Every gardener across the country is looking forward to the new plant introductions making their debut in 2025. One of the most eagerly awaited is a new angelonia or summer snapdragon by the name of Angelface Wedgwood Pink. This bicolored pink and white selection is one we have anticipated for years. You see, sometime ago Angelface Wedgwood Blue stole our hearts, making us long for more.

Agelface Wedgwood Blue has a trophy case numbering 17 awards stretching from South Dakota State University to the University of Florida. That is about as wide of a geographic range as you might expect. I say that yet it also took honors at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada.

So, this perfect color match of pink has the gardening world all abuzz. Angelface Wedgwood Pink gives a wonderful vertical element wherever it is grown: boxes, containers or in the ground. Vertical or in this case spiky is a habit that creates interest, even excitement in the garden where round flowers tend to dominate. Plant a cluster of spiky flowers in the mix and you will never want to be without them.

It was about 30 years ago that the first varieties of Angelonia angustifolia or angel flower showed up in the marketplace. We all grew them in wonder. How could a plant that for all the world looked like a blue snapdragon grow and persevere all summer? That gives you a clue to its native habitat of Mexico and the West Indies.

Looking back, my question is now what took so long to find it? When they showed up in the '90s they were in the Scrophulariaceae or snapdragon family. Now they and the snapdragon have lost their family. They are still related, but in the Plantaginaceae, or plantain family. Please forgive me if I stop chasing this rabbit now.

The Angelface Wedgwood Pink will get 18 to 30 inches in height with a spread of 12 to 18 inches. You will want to space 12 to 14 inches apart. They need plenty of sun to really reach their blooming potential. The soil need not be luxurious, just fertile and well-drained. Tight compacted clay is not your friend.

A light application of controlled release granules at planting and again in mid-summer will keep you blooming. Those in mixed containers and baskets watered daily during the summer will need regular feeding with a dilute water-soluble mix fertilizer every two to three weeks. I have had a couple of rare instances of angelonias returning in the spring but they are typically zone 10 perennial.

 

My favorite planting was created by son James and the Eden Estate Management team at a location in Phenix City, Alabama. They planted Angelface Wedgwood Pink with Truffula Pink gomphrena, which reached about the same height. The lower level of the window box had the new Stardiva Pink and Stardiva White scaevola. These are new fan flowers making their debut this spring, but instead of flowers shaped like fans, they are indeed perfect stars.

There are 10 varieties in the Angelface series including two that are Angelface Cascade, a blue and a white. These are simply incredible in baskets where their trailing nature shows out. These 10 varieties have won 64 awards with more certainly to come. After the holidays you might start talking to your favorite garden center about getting the new Angelface Wedgwood Pink and of course those other colors you’ll treasure.

____

(Norman Winter, horticulturist, garden speaker and author of “Tough-as-Nails Flowers for the South” and “Captivating Combinations: Color and Style in the Garden.” Follow him on Facebook @NormanWinterTheGardenGuy.)

(NOTE TO EDITORS: Norman Winter receives complimentary plants to review from the companies he covers.)


©2025 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

 

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