Mignonette-leaved Bittercress: complete guide
Cardamine resedifolia L.
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Overview
The mignonette-leaved bittercress (Cardamine resedifolia L.) is a delicate alpine specialist native to European mountain regions. This fine mountain dweller distinguishes itself through delicate foliage and small white flowers.
Preferring cool mountain climates and shaded locations, this plant thrives in moist rock gardens and alpine regions. Compact growth habit and modest dimensions make it ideal for understated gardens.
Appearance and Blooming
The mignonette-leaved bittercress forms a low, spreading mound with extremely fine foliage. Leaves are pinnate (hand-like), small, delicately lobed, and greenish in tone.
Flowers are small, approximately 0.8-1 cm diameter, pure white with four petals. They appear in dense, compact racemes atop weak, drooping stems reaching approximately 10-20 cm tall. Blooming occurs June through August.
Mature plants reach 15-30 cm height and develop gray, elongated seed capsules following bloom.
Ideal Location
This plant thrives in light shade to semi-shade with filtered sunlight. Minimum 3-4 hours indirect light suffices.
In mountain gardens, protection from intense midday sun prevents desiccation. North or east-facing positions work well. Shelter from strong winds is important given drooping stem character.
Soil Requirements
This plant requires slightly acidic to neutral (pH 5.0-6.5), well-draining alpine soil with high organic matter content.
The plant thrives in moisture-rich mountain soils abundant in compost or peaty material. Drainage must not be poor, so mineral additives help. A rich alpine earth mixture with compost and sand in equal proportions works well.
Watering
This plant tolerates moist conditions well and need never dry completely. In naturally moist mountain gardens, they thrive without supplemental water.
During dry periods, water regularly to prevent desiccation. Avoid waterlogged conditions.
Pruning
Minimal pruning is required. Dead leaves or flowers can gently be removed.
Following seed set, seed pods can be removed unless you desire self-seeding.
Maintenance Calendar
Spring: plants grow and bloom; ensure adequate moisture.
Summer: maintain moisture during blooming.
Autumn: reduce moisture as growth slows.
Winter: minimal care.
Winter Hardiness
The mignonette-leaved bittercress is extremely hardy, tolerating temperatures to -20 degrees Celsius. It naturally inhabits severe mountain winters.
Protection from heavy snow can help, though the plant typically survives unprotected.
Companion Plants
Combine with other shade-tolerant alpines like Hepatica or Saxifraga. Add ferns for textural contrast.
Yellow flowers like Primula aureus contrast beautifully. Silver foliage such as Artemisia provides background.
Closing Thoughts
The mignonette-leaved bittercress is an elegant choice for shaded mountain gardens. With proper moisture and alpine soil, you'll nurture a fine, delicate plant delivering extended mountain bloom tranquility.
Gardenworld.app visitors discover inspiration for mountain garden designs. Explore more plant profiles at gardenworld.app.
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