Perennial Pollinator

Gaura 'The Bride'

Oenothera lindheimeri 'The Bride' — whirling butterflies; formerly Gaura

£2.70approx. 40 seeds

Clouds of pure white starry blooms on slender arching stems — the white Whirling Butterflies that bring magical dancing movement to moon gardens and cottage borders.

Sowing months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Height
60–90cm
Spread
60cm
Spacing
45cm
Position
Full sun
Soil
Drought-tolerant once established; dislikes wet clay in winter — add grit
Grow guide
How to grow Gaura 'The Bride'
Read the full guide →
About this variety

Gaura lindheimeri 'The Bride' White Whirling Butterflies 'The Bride'

Clouds of pure white starry blooms on slender, arching, almost-invisible stems — Gaura 'The Bride' is the white form of the iconic Whirling Butterflies, bringing the same graceful dancing movement to the cottage garden with the additional design value of pure white that lights up borders, glows in evening light, and serves as the perfect neutral foil for warmer companions.

The white form of Gaura is — if anything — even more romantic than its pink sister. Pure white four-petalled flowers loosely scattered along slender arching stems create a constant low haze of movement across the plant, the individual flowers fluttering like a slow-motion snowstorm even in still air. The pure white colour gives 'The Bride' particular value in moon gardens and white borders, where the luminous quality of the flowers genuinely glows in low evening light. Native to the prairies of Texas and Louisiana, fully drought-tolerant, flowering continuously from June through October. Hardy perennial (H4–H5). RHS Plants for Pollinators recognised. Height 60–90cm.

A note on growing

Sow indoors February to April at 18–22°C. Surface-sow as the seeds need light to germinate; press gently into moist compost. Germination variable, typically 14–28 days. Like all Gaura, Year 1 establishes the root system with modest flowering; Year 2+ delivers the full display.

Plant out into full sun in well-drained soil. Avoid waterlogged winter ground at all costs — this is the most common cause of failure. Gravel gardens, sandy soils, raised beds are ideal. Heavy clay in low-lying positions is fatal. Once established, drought-tolerance is exceptional. A light mid-summer trim (late July) restores compact form and triggers a second flush of flowers. May behave as short-lived perennial in particularly cold or wet UK gardens.

Where it shines

In moon gardens and white borders, where the pure white flowers and dancing movement create magical effects in evening light. In gravel gardens where drought-tolerance suits the conditions. As an essential "softener" in front of heavy or rigid planting — pure white Gaura makes adjacent colours read more vividly while adding airy movement. As a cut flower for soft, romantic white arrangements. In wedding flowers, where the airy white delivers ethereal quality that few other cut flowers can match.

Plant alongside

For a cool moon-garden scheme, combine 'The Bride' with Cosmos 'Purity', Ammi majus, and Cornflower 'Snowman' for a layered all-white cottage cutting garden. For prairie texture contrast, pair with Echinops ritro 'Veitch's Blue' (matching airy whites against rigid blue spheres) and Achillea 'Marshmallow'. With Gaura 'Pink Bouquet' for the classic romantic pink-and-white whirling-butterfly combination.

Plant alongside

Gaura 'The Bride' pairs beautifully with these cottage garden classics

RHS Plants for Pollinators

This plant has been assessed by the Royal Horticultural Society and recommended as especially beneficial to bees, butterflies and other pollinators. Growing plants like this directly supports UK pollinator populations — something close to our hearts at Salle Moor Hall Farm, where we see the difference a cottage garden full of the right plants can make.

Learn more at RHS.org.uk →