Open pollinated. Annual. Again the genius of Keith Hammett turns sweet pea breeding on its head with this fragrant reverse bicolor where pale mauve-pink standards flutter above the deeper-hued lavender-blue wings. Would look stunning in a bouquet with Cupani. Hammett had been working with the Turkish L. belinensis in an attempt to develop a yellow sweet pea (as yet an unfulfilled quest) when he discovered instead that, through crossing, he could intensify the colors of this other longterm project. A grandiflora type, growing to 6', with 3-4 flowers per stem, it takes its name from the Samuel Butler novel which recounts a fictional version of his travels in New Zealand, Hammett’s home country. The name is an anagram of nowhere. Especially attractive to pollinators.
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