Leaves very heavily blotched and suffused dark purplish brown, often more brown than green, like a US chocolate cake, or a small invisible person often found shooing demented pheasants in front of your car. Flowers are violet with white edges to the petals. Our introduction. 30cm (9cmSQ).
A very free-flowering plant with good sized glossy rose-pink flowers. Makes tidy dense clumps of leaves all year. Excellent cultivar from Robin Moss. (9cmSQ)
White petals depening to pink with age have a strong network of crimson veins. Similar to G. x oxonianum ‘Lacetime’, but less heavily netted. The leaves are matt and hairy, making it unlike G. versicolor. From John Hobson. Previously listed under G. versicolor. (9cmSQ)
Thanks to Christian Kress for this dramatic plant with large glossy jagged-edge leaves. Large (over 4cm) bright rose-pink flowers are heavily veined on this bushy plant whioch has masses of flowers all summer. (1LSQ)
New in 2000. The first variegated G. x oxonianum. Yellow eaves with green centrea and red spots between the leaf divisions. Brilliant in spring, turns greener in summer with small pink flowers. Less vigorous. (syn. ‘Jester’, ‘Kurt’s Variegated’) (9cmSQ)
Pale salmon flowers veined in purplish crimson on a smaller plant. Striking leaves are marked with a wide chocolate zone making a distinctive feature. 30cm. (9cmSQ)
Vigorous plant with uniquely distinctive five-lobed leaves. Palest pink flowers are white and then green at the centre, funnel-shaped and netted with darker veins. (9cmSQ)