Cape Fuchsia
Phygelius 'Funfare Cream' (Cape Fuchsia)
Cape Fuchsia
Phygelius 'Funfare Cream' (Cape Fuchsia)
Phygelius 'Funfare Cream' (Cape Fuchsia)
17cm / 2L
£14.99
Ordering in autumn or winter? Many hardy exotics arrive dormant or cut back right now. This is normal, and the best time to plant.
Seasonal by nature: what to expect
- Grown outdoors, the way nature intended. Weather-tested and hardened in real UK conditions, so they thrive in your garden. A few marks on the older leaves are normal, the sign of a tough, real plant rather than a flaw.
- It follows the seasons. Depending on when you order, your plant may arrive cut back, dormant or leafless. That's healthy: dormancy is the ideal time to plant.
- Posted, not posed. Big leafy plants like bananas and gingers may be trimmed or gently folded to travel safely. It does the plant no harm, and it powers away again in spring.
Not sure what to expect from yours? Dormant, cut-back or weather-marked plants are all perfectly healthy and normal. Read what to expect through the seasons
The Phygelius 'Funfare Cream', one of the prettiest of the Cape Fuchsias, is a bushy semi-evergreen perennial that sends up airy spires of hanging, tubular cream flowers all summer and well into autumn. Cool, soft and endlessly cheerful, it brings a graceful exotic note to a sunny border or a patio pot, and the bees adore it.
Bred from the South African Phygelius, this is a sun-loving, long-flowering plant that earns its place many times over. Rated around RHS H4, it is hardy in most of the UK, but coming through the year hinges on one thing: a damp, freezing winter is what catches it out, while dry roots let it shrug the cold off. Give it a sheltered spot with sharp drainage and it will sail through, and even if a hard frost cuts it back it reshoots freely from the base each spring.
How and where to grow
- Position: full sun for the most flowers, tolerating a little light shade, in a warm spot sheltered from cold drying winds.
- Soil: any fertile, free-draining soil across the full pH range, with sharp drainage the priority, never waterlogged in winter.
- Size: a compact, bushy habit to roughly 40 to 90cm tall and around 50cm wide, reaching full size in two to five years.
- Hardiness: around RHS H4, semi-evergreen, cut back by hard frost and reshooting from the base in spring, helped by a dry winter mulch.
Water regularly through the first summer to establish, then enjoy a plant that is fairly drought-tolerant and simply keeps on flowering. Deadhead through the season and it will carry its cream spires from June right through to October. It is a natural in a mixed exotic border, thrives in a container as one of our favourite plants for pots and containers, and its nectar-rich flowers make it one of the best plants for pollinators you can grow. In milder coastal gardens it also earns a place among our coastal and exposed planting.
Pair it with bolder foliage from the wider hardy exotics range for a lush, layered look, and see our hardy exotics: what to expect guide for how these plants behave through the seasons. Every plant we supply is nursery-grown, carefully selected for a healthy root system, and packed with care to arrive in superb condition.
Hardiness & Frost
Rated around RHS H4, so hardy in most of the UK. This is a semi-evergreen Cape Fuchsia: in a mild winter it holds much of its foliage, while a hard frost can cut it back to ground level. Either way it reshoots strongly from the base in spring, so do not give up on it. The main risk is a cold, WET winter, with waterlogging around the roots while it is cold, rather than cold on its own. A sheltered spot with sharp drainage is the key to carrying it through, and it sits on the borderline of H4 to H5 in milder, well-drained gardens.
Sun & Aspect
Full sun gives the best flowering, though it will take a little light dappled shade. Choose a warm, sheltered position out of cold drying winds, ideally against a south or west-facing wall. It is equally happy in the open border or in a container on a sunny patio.
Soil
Grows in any fertile, free-draining soil, from chalk and loam to clay and sand, right across the pH range. Sharp drainage matters most of all: work in plenty of grit on heavy ground, and never let it sit waterlogged over winter. In pots use a free-draining, loam-based compost with added grit.
Watering & Establishment
Water regularly through the first summer to settle the roots in, after which it becomes fairly drought-tolerant. Feed in spring and deadhead spent spires through the season to keep fresh cream flowers coming into autumn. Apply a dry winter mulch over the crown for protection, then cut back any frost-damaged stems in early spring as new growth breaks from the base.
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Yes. Phygelius 'Funfare Cream' is rated around RHS H4, so it is hardy in most of the UK. The bigger danger than cold on its own is a cold, wet winter, so plant it in a sheltered spot with sharp drainage. Even if a hard frost cuts it back, it reshoots freely from the base in spring. See more of our hardy exotics.
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It is semi-evergreen. In a mild winter it keeps much of its foliage, but after a hard frost it can die back close to the ground. This is normal: fresh shoots break from the base each spring. A dry winter mulch over the crown helps it come through, and you simply cut back any frost-damaged stems in early spring.
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Give it full sun for the most flowers, in a warm spot sheltered from cold drying winds. It grows in any fertile, free-draining soil across the full pH range, with sharp drainage the priority. It is a natural in a mixed exotic border.
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Apply a dry mulch over the crown in late autumn and make sure the soil never sits waterlogged, because cold combined with wet is the main risk, not cold alone. In spring, cut back any frost-damaged stems to let strong new growth come through from the base.
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Very much so. The nectar-rich tubular flowers are loved by bees and a magnet for pollinators from June right into autumn, which makes it one of the best plants for pollinators for a sunny border.
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Yes. Its compact, bushy habit makes it an excellent container plant for a sunny patio. Use a free-draining, loam-based compost with added grit, keep it watered through summer, and never let it sit wet in winter. Browse more of our plants for pots and containers.
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Your plant will arrive in its nursery grow pot — the plastic pot it's been growing in. We don't include a decorative pot as standard, and there's a good reason for that: it means you get to choose one that fits your space and style, rather than being stuck with something that doesn't suit your home.
It also means you're not paying extra for a pot you might not want. The nursery pot is perfectly fine to keep your plant in for a while, just pop it inside a decorative cover pot or cache pot and you're good to go. When you're ready to repot (usually after a growing season or when roots start poking out the bottom), you can move it into something more permanent with fresh soil.
If you're not sure what size cover pot to go for, check the pot selector tool listed above, you'll want a decorative pot that's a centimetre or two wider than that to give it a comfortable fit. -
Every plant on our site includes the pot size (e.g. 12cm) and, where possible, an approximate height. That's the most reliable way to set your expectations, photos can sometimes make a plant look larger or smaller than it really is.
If you're thinking "that sounds quite small for the price," here's something worth knowing: younger, smaller plants almost always adapt better to your home than larger ones. They adjust faster to your light and humidity, put out new growth more quickly, and tend to establish stronger root systems long-term. A plant that grows into your space will usually outperform one that was already big when it arrived.
That said, every plant is an individual. The one you receive may vary slightly in height, shape, or fullness compared to the photo, that's the nature of living things, not a quality issue. We select healthy, well-established specimens, and if you ever feel your plant doesn't match what you were expecting, just get in touch and we'll take a look. -
There's a big difference between a plant that's been sitting under on a retail shelf and one that's been looked after and cared for by people who specialise in exactly this.
Our plants are grown in house or sourced from specialist nurseries, many of them varieties you simply won't find at your local garden centre or supermarket. Before anything leaves us, it's checked over by our horticultural team to make sure it's healthy, well-rooted, and ready to thrive in your home. We're not shifting volume off a pallet, we're choosing plants we'd want to keep ourselves.
When you buy from a supermarket, you get a plant and a generic care label. When you buy from us, you get the knowledge that comes with it, detailed care guidance, a team you can actually contact if something isn't going right, and the confidence that what's arriving has been looked after properly from the moment it was grown to the moment it reaches your door.
We're a specialist nursery first, not a retailer that happens to sell plants. That's the difference, and you'll see it the moment you open the box. -
First things first, unbox it as soon as you can. Plants don't love being in dark boxes any more than you would, and the sooner yours is out and breathing, the better.
Remove all the packaging carefully, give the soil a check with your finger, and water lightly if it feels dry. Then find it a spot with appropriate light, but avoid putting it straight into harsh direct sun or next to a radiator. Think of it like arriving somewhere new after a long journey: it needs a moment to adjust.
It's completely normal for your plant to look a little tired or droopy after transit. This is called transit stress, and most plants bounce back within a week or two. You might see a yellow leaf or some drooping, don't panic, and resist the urge to overwater or start repotting straight away.
Our advice for the first couple of weeks: leave it in its nursery pot, water it only when the top layer of soil feels dry, and let it acclimatise to your home's light, temperature, and humidity. Once it's settled in and showing signs of new growth, you can think about repotting or moving it to its permanent spot.
Every plant we sell comes with a care guide on the product page so you'll know exactly what it needs going forward. And if anything doesn't look right, get in touch with our team, we're always happy to help. -
Yes! and we go to serious lengths to make sure of it. Every plant is hand-packed by our team with protective wrapping and secure, custom-designed boxes to keep it stable and safe in transit. We've shipped hundreds of thousands of plants across the UK and our packaging methods have been refined over years to handle the bumps and jolts of delivery.
During colder months, we monitor weather forecasts and offer heat packs where needed to protect against frost. In extreme conditions, we may hold your order for a day or two rather than risk sending it out, we'd rather you wait an extra day than receive a stressed plant.
That said, plants are living things, and the occasional transit wobble can happen. If your plant arrives damaged or isn't in the condition you'd expect, just get in touch within 48 hours with a photo, and we'll make it right, whether that's a replacement or a full refund. No fuss.
The short version: we treat every box like it's going to someone who really cares about what's inside, because it is.
All plants are covered by our 7-day live arrival guarantee. We pack every order in protective, sustainable packaging designed to keep your plants safe in transit. Whether grown in our own nursery or sourced from trusted partner growers, every plant is checked before it ships. On the rare occasion something isn't right on arrival, we'll make it good, provided the plant is still in its original nursery pot.
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