Bramdean Sweet PeasBramdean Sweet PeasBramdean Sweet Pea Plug

Bramdean Sweet Pea Plants

Lathyrus odoratus 'Bramdean'Feefo logo

The details

  • Colour: White with a touch of pink
  • Stem: Long
  • Height: 1.8m
  • Type: Modern Grandiflora
  • Scent: Strong, sweet, heady
  • Flowering: June-September
  • Planting Months: March-June
  • RHS Award of Garden Merit
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£ 8.25

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Description

Lathyrus Bramdean

Bramdean Sweet Peas (Lathyrus odoratus) are one of the best of the "white" varieties available with highly scented flowers sometimes flushed with pink on long stems perfect for cutting. They make a real feature in containers, summer borders and on trellises.

Browse our sweet pea range.

Our Sweet Peas are delivered in purpose-designed, recycled cardboard packaging, and are ready to be planted out when you get them.
We generally send them out between March and May, but we will email you with the likely delivery timescale once you have placed your order.

Features

  • Colour: White with a touch of pink
  • Stem: Long
  • Height: 1.8m
  • Type: Modern Grandiflora
  • Scent: Strong, sweet, heady
  • Flowering: June-September
  • Planting Months: March-June
  • RHS Award of Garden Merit

Cultivation Instructions

Plant Bramdean Sweet Peas in well prepared, moist soil that ideally was enriched with organic matter the previous autumn (if you did not do it then, do it now!). Erect supports for the peas to climb up before planting. They can also be planted in pots of sufficient size - allow 6 litres per plant - and with an ideal planting medium of 50% compost, 40 %top soil and 10% well rotted manure. General purpose compost will do however but produces fewer flowers.

The principal requirement is enough water - Sweet Peas are thirsty and hungry plants. They can cope with a little shade but flower better in full sun.

Space each plant about 30 cm apart and about 5 cm from its support. The hole should be deep enough to accommodate the longest root and the soil should come up to the level of the first side shoot. Use wire/netting/twine between the supports so that the Sweet Pea can climb naturally. You will still need to tie them in to the frame. They grow fast, so check every ten days or so.

Water well; the soil around sweet peas should never dry out. As the flowers develop pick them, and then pick again, otherwise they start to form seedpods and will stop flowering altogether. Keep tying in and picking for as long as you can. Perfectionists will remove the curling tendrils which grip other stems and can result in flowers with wiggly stems and also will remove side shoots. see the website for more advice on training sweetpeas.

By all means apply a high potash and phosphate fertiliser during the growing season. (Sweet Peas actually fix nitrogen from the air into the soil so you don't need more of that.) Home-made comfrey liquid is perfect or Tomorite will do especially if you are on a sandy soil.