Paeonia ('Noémi Demay') 'PECHER'
Paeonia ('Noémi Demay') 'PECHER'
perennial peony
perennial peony
SIZE/TYPE | mid-sized perennial |
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USUAL HEIGHT | 0.6-0.7m |
USUAL WIDTH | 0.6-0.8m |
LEAVES | deciduous broadleaf |
COLOUR OF LEAVES | green |
FLOWERS | showy |
COLOUR OF FLOWERS | +multicolored:pink and cream |
BLOOMING TIME | May - June |
LOCATION | full sun |
SOIL TYPE | any (acidic to alkaline) |
SOIL MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS | evenly moist (dislikes drought) |
WINTER PROTECTION | |
FOR ZONE 5+6 | |
FOR ZONE 7 | |
BELONGS TO CATEGORIES | Perennials |
Pecher is an alternative and, to be honest, also an easier-to-remember name of a perennial peony Noémi Demay. It was bred by a French painter and botanist Jacques Colt and introduced in 1867. It boasts large, fully double flowers which are like apple blossoms – open pink and mature to almost white with a few creamy white to pale yellow petals. They are strongly scented and bloom early in the season – from late May atop only 60-70 cm tall stems which don't need staking. Deciduous leaves are rather thick, deep green, glossy, and palmately divided.
These peonies are great plants not only for perennial beds and borders, they also look very elegant combined with shrubs and trees where they soften their woody structures. They also make beautiful cut flowers, though, they never last more than a week. They are one of the easiest perennials to grow – just make sure you don’t put their rhizomes too deep. Then you'll have no trouble whatsoever - they can take almost any kind of weather caprice and full neglect. Peonies are long-lived plants, there can be found some 100 years old specimens in royal gardens and arboretums.
Peonies need fertile, well-drained, preferably moist soil. If you want to be generous to them water them freely on hot and dry days, and feed them annually after they roll up foliage completely. This way you can enhance their vigour, and plants will keep their flowers longer and look healthier. Still, this extra care is not required, once established they will grow without help. They don’t like transplanting. If you need to reduce the clump size, remove the unwanted part leaving the rest of the rhizomes in soil, untouched. Fully hardy to about -34 °C (USDA zone 4).
Last update 24-04-2022
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