Larkspurs are tall, inexpensive, and fantastic cut flowers for cottage gardens. These blooming plants are very easy to start from seed, too. Learn how to plant, grow, and care for larkspur in our plant growing guide.
About Larkspurs
If you’re a fan of tall flowers (like me), you’ll want to check out Larkspurs and Consolida ajacis. Also known as rocket larkspur for their rapid growth in spring, these cottage garden flowers provide a vertical display and a blooming period lasting up to two months with deadheading.
Larkspurs are sometimes confused with delphiniums due to their similar appearance. You’ll even see this plant called Delphinium consolida, further muddying the waters. Most delphiniums are perennial, and while similar in care and appearance, larkspurs are annuals–although they frequently self-seed.
They are easy to start from seed and make a great color border and vertical filler, especially if you aren’t ready to commit to a perennial. Dreamy swatches of larkspur planted along a fence, wall, or with other tall flowers are the best way to enjoy this dramatic plant. They also do well in containers, providing a tall backdrop against a patio railing or framing a pergola post.
Larkspurs make fantastic cut flowers. They are typically shades of blue, but they can also be found in pink, red, white, and purple. Blooms can be single, semi-double, or double, and foliage is a lacy blue-green.
All parts of the larkspur are toxic if ingested, so don’t let people or pets munch on them. Many gardeners report them to be deer, rabbit, and even groundhog-resistant, likely for this reason.