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Balloon Flower

Platycodon grandiflorus

Balloon Flower Bloom
Balloon Flower Blooms that are opened

Characteristics

  • Type: Perennial
  • Family: Campanulaceae
  • Native Range: China, Korea, Japan, Russia
  • Zone: 3 – 8
  • Height: 1 – 2.5 Feet
  • Spread: 12 – 18 Inches
  • Bloom Time: June – August
  • Bloom Description: White, Blue, Pink
  • Sun: Full Sun to Part Shade
  • Water: Medium
  • Maintenance: Low
  • Flower: Showy
  • Attracts: Bees, Butterflies

Culture

Balloon Flower is best grown in light, medium moisture, organically rich, well-drained loams in full sun to part shade. Avoid wet or poorly-drained soils. Plants are easily grown from seed. Division and transplanting are possible but tricky because of the fragile, fleshy root systems of these plants, and it is probably best to leave plants undisturbed once established. Deadheading spent flowers generally prolongs the bloom period. New season plant stems emerge late in spring, so gardeners must be careful not to damage crowns by early cultivation. Leaving old plant stems in place throughout winter to the point when the new growth first appears helps mark plant locations. Taller plants often need to be staked because of floppy stems. Consider cutting back plant stems by 1/2 in May to reduce plant height and possibly avoid staking.

Noteworthy Characteristics

Platycodon grandiflorus, commonly called balloon flower, is a clump-forming perennial that is so named because its flower buds puff up like balloons before bursting open into outward-to-upward-facing, bell-shaped flowers with five pointed lobes. Plants are native to slopes and meadows in China, Japan, Korea and Siberia. White flowers to 2-3” across bloom throughout summer, singly or in small clusters, atop stems typically growing to 30” tall. Ovate to lance-shaped, toothed, blue-green leaves to 2” long.

Problems

No serious insect or disease problems. Root rot may occur in overly moist soils. Watch for slugs and snails.

Garden Uses

Plant in rock gardens, in border fronts, as edging, or in containers.


Courtesy of Missouri Botanical Society Plant Finder

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