Urgent Warning to Anyone With Bluebells in Their Garden
Understanding bluebell types and protecting native species in your garden and beyond.
Not All Bluebells Are the Same
Spanish Bluebells Can Spread Quickly
They Can Hybridise With Native Bluebells
Native Bluebells Have a Distinctive Look
Spanish Bluebells Look More Upright
Hybrids Can Be Harder to Identify
Wild Native Bluebells Are Protected
Garden Waste Can Spread the Problem
Removing Them Takes Patience
The Best Choice Is Native Planting
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Bluebells are one of Britain’s most loved spring flowers, but gardeners are being warned to look more closely at what is actually growing in their borders. The concern is not about native English bluebells themselves, which are part of the UK’s woodland identity. The real issue is the spread of Spanish bluebells and hybrid bluebells, which can escape gardens, spread aggressively, and threaten native bluebell populations. The Woodland Trust specifically advises gardeners not to buy or plant non-native bluebells, especially near woodland, because of hybridisation risk.
The warning matters because bluebells can look similar at first glance. Native bluebells are protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, while Spanish bluebells were introduced as garden plants and can now be found in gardens, roadsides, and woodland edges. The Wildlife Trusts explain that Spanish bluebells grow upright, have flowers all around the stem, and have little or no scent, unlike native bluebells, which droop to one side and have a sweet fragrance.