Description
Black Chocolate Soldier Gothic Columbine Seeds grow a compact, shade-loving Aquilegia with nodding chocolate-purple to brownish-black flowers and pale green sepals. It is a dramatic perennial for gothic gardens, woodland edges, shade borders, and black-and-white planting schemes where subtle dark flowers can be appreciated up close.
Why Grow It
- Nodding chocolate-black columbine blooms contrast with pale green sepals and fine divided foliage.
- A compact perennial for part sun to shade, reaching about 12 in. tall.
- Seeds need fall/winter sowing or about 30 days of cold-moist stratification before warm germination.
- Watermark-free product imagery is generated for the Nuptial Co. catalog, not copied from source photos.
Growing Information
| Botanical name | Aquilegia viridiflora ‘Chocolate Soldier’ |
|---|---|
| Life cycle | Hardy perennial that can self-sow once established |
| Mature height | About 12 in. tall in a compact mound |
| Light | Part sun to shade |
| Bloom or harvest window | Spring bloom after establishment; flowering increases as plants mature |
| Seed count | 10 seeds |
| Sowing advice | Fall or winter sow for natural cold exposure, or cold-moist stratify for about 30 days before sowing. Press seeds onto moist mix and keep near 65-70 F after chilling. |
| Spacing | Space compact plants about 10-12 in. apart |
| Germination | Requires cold-moist stratification or fall/winter sowing; emergence may be slow and uneven |
Best For
- gothic gardens
- shade borders
- woodland edges
- pollinator beds
- black-and-white plantings
- compact perennial beds
Packet Details
Includes 10 seeds. Store seeds cool, dry, and dark until stratification. In cold climates, sow in late fall after temperatures stay below about 45 F so seeds chill naturally without sprouting too early.
FAQ
Do these columbine seeds need cold stratification?
Yes. Sow in late fall or winter for natural chilling, or refrigerate the seeds in a moist medium for about one month before planting.
Will it bloom the first year?
Columbines often focus on roots and foliage first, with stronger bloom as the perennial clump matures.
What light does it prefer?
Part sun to shade is ideal, especially where hot afternoon sun would stress delicate columbine foliage.









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