VI–VIII; usually with bright green foliage; height 16–20cm; spread 26–30cm. More than one clone is sold under this name and hence f. alba is more appropriate.
Heathers
‘Alba Major’
White flowers; VII–XI; mid-green foliage; vigorous spreading habit; height 26–30cm; spread 46–60cm.
An old cultivar; origins not known, but commercially available by 1870.
Name derived from albus = white; a reference to flower colour; major = greater; probably implying large white flowers.
‘Alba Minor’
VI–X; bright green foliage; neat, good ground–cover; height 16–20cm; spread 46–60cm. A nineteenth-century selection but still one of the best.
‘Dr Small’s Seedling’
VII–IX; rich dark green foliage; spreading; height 10–15cm; spread 31–45cm.
‘Domino’
White flowers; VII–X, with very dark sepals; mid-green foliage; height 31–45cm; spread 46–60cm.
Wild-collected sport; found on a plant near Broadstone, Dorset, England, by D. F. Maxwell in 1927; introduced by Maxwell & Beale (Broadstone) in 1929.
Name is nn allusion to the ebony (black) and white combination in the flowers.
‘Geke’
‘Godrevy’
V–IX, individual flowers globose; bright green foliage; compact, slow growing; height 10–15cm; spread 26–30cm. An ideal companion for ‘Pink Ice‘, found on Godrevy Towans, Cornwall.
‘Hookstone White’
VII–X, in long sprays; mid-green foliage; upright habit; height 31–45cm; spread 61–75cm. Found on the side of Grays Spot Hill on the Chobham Ridges, Surrey.
‘Marina’
VIII–X; light green foliage; neat broad habit; height 16–20cm; spread 31–45cm. More vigorous than ‘Godrevy‘. Found at Cap de Fréhel, Brittany, France, and introduced in The Netherlands.
‘Nell’
VII–IX; mid-green foliage; compact creeping habit; height 21–25cm; spread 31–45cm.
Possible seedling; introduced by Knap Hill nursery (Woking, Surrey, England) by 1970.
Named after Mrs H. C. Hawkins, a friend of the Waterer family.