Forget-me-not White
Forget-me-not White
Myosotis sylvatica 'White' White Forget-me-not
The crisp, sophisticated white form of the classic English Forget-me-not — pure white starry flowers on low neat mounds of fuzzy green foliage, the rare spring carpet that genuinely glows in shaded positions and serves as a luminous neutral backdrop that makes every neighbouring spring colour read more vividly.
While the classic blue Forget-me-not is lovely, the pure white variety brings crisp, sophisticated elegance to the spring garden. The same low neat mounds of fuzzy green foliage become completely smothered in clouds of snowy-white starry flowers from April to June. This is the ultimate plant for "lighting up" a dark corner — because white reflects the lowest levels of light, a drift of these under a tree or in a shady border genuinely seems to glow, especially at twilight or early morning. It is also the perfect neutral foil for spring bulbs, creating a frothy white carpet that makes the bold colours of tulips and wallflowers absolutely pop. Hardy biennial following the same two-year cycle as the blue form. RHS Plants for Pollinators recognised, providing essential early-spring nectar for waking bees. Self-seeds reliably.
A note on growing
Direct sow outdoors May–July in a shaded or semi-shaded position. Cover lightly with 3–5mm fine soil. Germination 14–21 days at cool temperatures (15–18°C — Forget-me-nots do not need warmth to germinate). Move to final flowering positions in September or October. The same end-of-cycle powdery mildew applies — normal, harmless to seeds, just remove plants when scruffy.
Where it shines
In moon gardens and white spring borders, where the luminous white genuinely glows in low light. As a "lighting up" plant for dark corners, north-facing borders and shaded woodland edges — pure white reflects the lowest levels of light and brightens shade in a way no other colour can match. Underplanted beneath dark tulips (particularly 'Queen of Night') for a designer high-contrast spring display — the deep black-purple tulips rising from a snowy white carpet is among the most photographed combinations in modern English garden design. As a neutral foil for soft pastel spring schemes.
Plant alongside
For the designer spring combination, underplant 'White' Forget-me-not beneath dark tulips ('Queen of Night') for high-contrast drama. For soft pastel mixing, combine with Forget-me-not 'Victoria Mixed' and pastel wallflowers. For a moon garden scheme, pair with white tulips and Aquilegia 'Columbine Blue' (white-and-blue) for a cool, sophisticated spring palette.
Product features
Product features
Materials and care
Materials and care
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
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