Last Day--Select Hostas Up to 50% Off! Save 20% with May Web Specials Save Up to 70% With Our Memorial Day Sale!
Geranium dalmaticum Dragon Heart
Blooms for Months and Months!
Recently Viewed
  • Garland Terracotta-Style Planter (8-inch)

    Garland Terracotta-Style Planter (8-inch)

    $10.95 ea

Geranium dalmaticum 'Dragon Heart'

Item # 48471
$12.95 ea
Buy 3+ at $11.95 ea
Buy 6+ at $10.95 ea
Ships at the proper planting time for your zone.

These magenta blooms catch the eye from across the street!

This is a spreading Geranium, non-aggressive but happy to meander through other plants.

Have you ever wondered which plant defines the English garden look? For us, the answer is undoubtedly Hardy Geranium, with its billowy yet open habit and its eagerness to overlap its neighbors in a friendly way that shows off its own large, lovely foliage while also complementing different colors, shapes, and textures. And of all the Hardy Geraniums you might grow, 'Dragon Heart' is one of the absolute best. It spreads naturally, weaving in and out of its neighborhood while tossing up bold magenta and black blooms as it goes. And it flowers far, far longer than most others -- from early summer until mid-fall is not unusual! This is a plant you simply must dot around the sunny to partly shaded border, treat to your best containers, and share with your Roses and other open-habit shrubs and perennials.

'Dragon Heart' reaches just a foot high in bloom, yet spreads up to 18 inches wide and is so well-branched that it sets far, far more flowers than most others. These 2-inch blooms are a rich, shimmery magenta with a black center and deep red veins. They appear on very slender amber-brown stems, their bright beauty contrasting with the soft green of the large foliage. And while they are most profuse in early summer and fall, they continue right through the hottest weeks of the year in most climates.

A selection of G. dalmaticum, 'Dragon Heart' has ancestry going back to the mountains of Eastern Europe, yet it finds itself quite at home across the Atlantic and closer to sea level as well. It is the perfect cover-up for any leggy perennial, wending its way through the bare stems to create a carpet of brilliant color. (That's the secret of its appeal to roses, too!) Let its large foliage contrast to the needle-thin leaves of Coreopsis 'Jethro Tull'. It's a fine foreground planting for tall Echinacea and Gaillardia, and loves the rich soil favored by Phlox. And the list goes on!

Give this Hardy Geranium full sun in the north, more shade farther south. It likes well-enriched soil and while it will tolerate others, it flowers best when fed and watered regularly. Create that English garden billowy profusion in your own border this season with exciting new 'Dragon Heart'! Zones 4-8.

Genus Geranium
Species dalmaticum
Variety 'Dragon Heart'
Bloom Season Early Summer - Mid Fall
Habit Mound-shaped
Zone 4 - 8
Plant Height 12 in
Plant Width 18 in
Bloom Size 2 in
Item Form 1-Quart
Additional Characteristics Bloom First Year, Butterfly Lovers, Ever Blooming, Flower, Free Bloomer, Rose Companions, Season Extenders
Bloom Color Black, Dark Red, Magenta
Foliage Color Medium Green
Light Requirements Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture Requirements Moist,  well-drained
Resistance Deer Resistance, Heat Tolerant
Soil Tolerance Normal,  loamy
Uses Beds, Border, Containers, Ground Cover, Outdoor
Restrictions CAN, HI, PR
  • Butterflies like a lot of sunlight, so locate your garden in a sunny area.

  • If you live in a windy location, plant your butterfly-attracting plants near a building, fence, or hedge to protect them.

  • Plant a variety of nectar-rich plants, as well as shrubs and evergreens for shelter.

  • Since many butterflies and native flowering plants have co-evolved, try to put in some that are native to your area. The Lady Bird Johnson Wildlife Center provides lists of plants native to states and regions.

  • Certain colors are particularly attracting to butterflies – red, yellow, pink, purple, or orange blooms that are clustered or flat-topped, with a short flower tubes are especially attractive to adult butterflies.

  • Avoid using pesticides, especially around nectar-producing plants.

  • Provide a shallow source of water – try a birdbath with pebbles lining the bowl.

  • Place a rock in a sunny spot for butterfly basking and resting.

  • Create a "puddling area" by digging a shallow hole filled with compost or manure where rainwater will collect and release essential salts and minerals.

  • If you want butterflies to breed in your garden, put in some caterpillar food plants, such as parsley, milkweeds, asters, thistles, violets, clover, grasses, and Queen Anne’s Lace.

  • Since butterflies need nectar throughout the entire adult phase of their lives, try to create a design that will allow for a continuous bloom – when one stops blooming, another starts.