Campanula lactiflora | Milky Bellflower | Various

Campanula lactiflora belongs to the plant family CAMPANULACE and Genus Campanula This plant specimen prefers Wet soil a pH of 7 . All plants need light to allow the photosynthesis process of converting carbon dioxide to growth sugars to take place. Some plants need more sun-light than others. For this plant those sunlight conditions are well described as … Full sun

We are often asked about plants for humming bird attraction. Unfortunately Campanula lactiflora does not attract these beautiful hummingbird, sunbird or nectar feeding varieties of garden birds

Impressive Autumn foliage display is not shown by Campanula lactiflora so look for an alternative plant for pleasing Fall leaf properties

Campanula lactiflora milky bellflower is not known as a butterfly attracting plant

Almost all plants grown in gardens need to be fed using fertilzer in order to see them at their best. For this plant the suggested fertilizer program would be based upon … Typical mix of: 3 parts Nitrogen (N), 2 parts Phosphorous (P) and 3 parts Potassium (K for Latin name Kalium).

The flowers of Campanula lactiflora have a mildly spicy aroma. Milky bellflower can survive very cold winters with annual averages as low as -30 Fahrenheit. It prefers moist to wet soils.

Campanula lactiflora will under good growing conditions survive and prosper between 3 and10 years.

Campanula lactiflora is a perennial. Most often the blossoms occur in either white or blue.

Flowers of the plant Campanula lactiflora have a smell of new mown hay. pleasant warm scent and in terms of a broad classification could be described as … Spicy | Mild

This specimen plant will normally never grow higher than 4' feet will have an overall spread somewhere between ... not specified on this plants page

Campanula latifolia | Giant Bellflower, Great Bellflower | Various

Campanula medium | Canterbury Bells | Various

Campanula muralis | Dalmation Bellflower | Flower

"The Fragrant Garden.  A book about sweet scented flowers and leaves", Louise Beebe Wilder, Dover Publications, New York, 1974.  Originally published as "The Fragrant Path", Louise Beebe Wilder, 1932, The Macmillan Company.

"Xeriscape Gardening: Water Conservation for the American Landscape", Connie Lockhart Ellefson, Thomas L. Stephens, and Douglas Welsh, Macmillan Publishing Company, New York, 1992.