Position
Full sun to part shade



Phlox
VAT included · plus
Your outdoor plant has just been packed, transported and unpacked, so give it a calm start before planting or placing it permanently. Remove all packaging carefully, check the pot, stems, visible roots and substrate moisture, and settle any loose growing medium back around the root ball. Water if the root ball feels dry, but do not leave the pot standing in water. For the first few days, keep the plant in a sheltered spot suited to its light needs, away from strong midday sun, heavy wind, frost and heat stress.
Do not move the plant straight into full exposure, especially if it is young, newly flushed, evergreen, recently pruned or greenhouse-grown. Gradually introduce more sun, wind and temperature variation over several days. If cold nights, storms, intense sun or hot dry weather are expected, keep the plant protected until conditions are more stable. Do not fertilize immediately after delivery; let the plant settle first and resume feeding only when it is actively growing and conditions are suitable.
Outdoor plants may arrive in different seasonal stages. Depending on the time of year, your plant may be leafy, flowering, newly sprouting, recently pruned, dormant, partly bare or leafless. Adjust care to what the plant is doing: actively growing plants need closer moisture checks, while dormant plants usually need protection from extremes and only light moisture management until growth resumes.
Plant outdoors when the soil is workable and weather conditions suit the plant type. Avoid planting during frost, heatwaves, waterlogged soil or very dry windy periods. It is better to keep the plant protected in its pot for a short time than to plant into stressful conditions. After planting, water thoroughly so the root ball and surrounding soil connect properly, then monitor moisture while the plant establishes.
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Phlox paniculata 'David' is a tall, upright garden phlox with fragrant white flower heads held above leafy green stems. It brings height and scent to summer borders, cottage-style perennial beds and cut-flower planting. The white flowers are especially useful near purple, blue, silver and deep green planting, where they add clarity during the busiest part of the growing season. This set of 3 gives enough plants to form a small drift, repeat a white note through a border, or fill a generous container with vertical summer growth.
Garden phlox is a herbaceous perennial, so the top growth dies back at the end of the season and fresh shoots return from the crown in spring. Phlox paniculata 'David' is known for a strong white display and good garden performance when moisture, airflow and soil structure are right. It suits gardeners who want a flowering perennial with a classic border feel, fragrance and a clear midsummer focus.
The plant forms a bushy clump with upright stems and narrow green leaves. Flower clusters open from mid to late summer, usually July into September, depending on weather and site. The blooms are held in rounded panicles at the top of the stems, giving a clean vertical outline. The scent is part of the appeal, especially near seating areas, paths and cutting beds where the flowers are close enough to enjoy.
Phlox paniculata 'David' grows in full sun or partial shade. Full sun supports generous flowering, while light shade can help in hotter gardens where soil dries quickly. The important point is balance: enough light for flower production, enough moisture for steady growth, and enough air movement around the stems. Airflow matters because garden phlox foliage can mark when leaves remain damp and crowded for long periods.
Use fertile, moisture-retentive and well-drained soil. Clay, chalk and loam can all support this plant when the structure allows roots to breathe. Add compost or well-rotted organic matter before planting to improve moisture holding and soil life. Keep the root zone evenly moist through warm spells, especially during bud formation and flowering. A dry root run can shorten the display and weaken the foliage.
Use the 3 plants as a loose triangle for a natural clump effect, or run them through a border as repeated white accents. Ultimate height can reach 100 to 150 cm, with an eventual spread up to about 100 cm in open ground. Spacing around 100 cm gives mature plants room to broaden and helps air move between stems. In smaller displays, the plants can start closer while young, then be lifted and divided once clumps fill their space.
Plant at the same depth as the nursery pot, firm gently and water thoroughly. A mulch after planting helps keep moisture steady, but leave the crown clear. During the first season, water deeply in dry periods so moisture reaches the root zone. Surface dampness alone gives a false signal; deep moisture is what supports stems, buds and flowers.
Phlox paniculata 'David' can be grown in a large container, particularly where a summer display is wanted near a sunny seating area. Choose a deep pot with drainage holes and use a fertile, peat-free outdoor mix with added structure. Container-grown plants tend to mature at a smaller scale than those in the ground. They also dry faster in warm weather, so watering needs closer checking through warm weather.
Check moisture by testing the upper 30 to 40% of pot depth; water deeply when that layer has dried and the pot feels lighter. In hot spells, a large container may need regular checking because tall flowering stems use water quickly. Feed lightly during active growth to support new shoots and flower production, then let the plant slow naturally as autumn arrives.
Pinching young shoots in late spring can create a bushier plant with more flowering stems, although it can shift flowering slightly later. Deadhead faded clusters to keep the plant tidy and encourage further bloom where conditions allow. At the end of the season, cut stems down to the base in late autumn and clear old leaves from around the crown. This keeps the planting clean and gives fresh shoots an open start in spring.
Established clumps can be divided in spring or autumn when growth becomes crowded. Replant the strongest sections into refreshed soil and water them in well. Division keeps flower quality strong and gives the plant renewed root space. In a mixed border, pair Phlox paniculata 'David' with grasses, salvia, echinacea, sedum, hardy geraniums or late summer daisies for a layered display.
Phlox paniculata 'David' is a strong choice for white summer flowers with fragrance and height. Plant this set of 3 where the roots can stay evenly moist, give each clump room, and the flowers will become a clean midsummer anchor in the border.
Meadows, river margins and open woodland of eastern North America; selected forms grown for stronger stems and flower colour.
Herbaceous perennial
Position
Full sun to part shade
Moisture
Average to moist
Drainage
Moisture-retentive, Well-drained
Hardiness
Fully hardy · -20°C
Mature size
100–150 × 50–100 cm
Winter habit
Herbaceous die-back
Bloom time
Summer, Autumn
Containers
Good in pots
Pruning
After flowering, Spring