Spring is on its way! And one of its many delights is Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus.
Erinus alpinus grows in sunny places in the crevices of old walls and on rock outcrops, often forming large colonies. An individual Fairy Foxglove plant is small and pretty but a mass of Fairy Foxgloves in full flower (usually peaking in May), is beautiful and spectacular.
I still remember my first sighting of Fairy Foxgloves, in late May 2010. Vanna and I were cycling home through the village of Cawston and spotted a mass of pink flowers on an old brick wall near the church. We stopped to admire them and take photographs.
Erinus alpinus is a member of the family Plantaginaceae (or Veronicaceae, according to Stace’s Flora (note 1)), a relative of the true Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea, that I wrote about in June 2024.
Foxglove flowers are zygomorphic (they have only one plane of symmetry) but Fairy Foxglove flowers are only slightly zygomorphic (hemi-zygomorphic). The Fairy Foxglove is also much smaller plant, reaching between five and 20 centimetres tall. Foxgloves are biennial; Fairy Foxglove is a short-lived semi-evergreen perennial, usually living for five years or less.
Fairy Foxgloves form clusters of small rosettes of narrowly oblong leaves and ascending leafy stems bearing terminal clusters of flowers. The flowers are usually pink but white forms also occur (note 2).
Erinus alpinus is a neophyte, introduced in 1739 as a garden plant and was known from the wild by 1867 (at Tanfield in North-west Yorkshire). It is very hardy but needs a sunny, well-drained site. It will cope with acid, alkaline or neutral soils but it does need sunshine and good drainage and a rockery would be a good site for it. I grew a Fairy Foxglove plant for a couple of years in an alpine sink in the back garden, where it loved the summer sunshine but ultimately it didn’t cope with shade from the house in winter and I lost it after a couple of years.
Erinus alpinus is native to Algeria, Austria, France, Italy (including Sardinia), Morocco,, Spain (the Balearic Islands) and Switzerland. It grows as an introduced plant in Germany, Great Britain, Ireland and Sweden. (Wikipedia also mentions Algeria.) The plant has several other English names, including Starflower, Alpine Balsam, Jewel Flower and Liver Balsam.
The BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020 notes that Erinus alpinus has shown “a considerable spread since the 1960s, continuing in the 21st century, perhaps in part a result of the greater propensity of botanists to record plants on garden walls“. Here is the current distribution map:

Distribution map of Erinus alpinus from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.
Fairy Foxglove in Scotland
John Grace wrote an excellent account of Fairy Foxglove on the Botany in Scotland blog in January 2023 and he mentions the furthest north British populations of the plant at Invernaver, near Bettyhill in Sutherland (note 3).
I associate Fairy Foxglove with Scotland, particularly our trip to Oban in 2018. We took the bus to the island Seil, crossing the Clachan Bridge (the Bridge over the Atlantic) to reach the island. The bridge was pink with Fairy Foxgloves and would have made a very fine photograph if we’d been able to stop (note 4).
However, we did manage to see Fairy Foxglove in flower on walls on Oban and, later in the week, when we walked on the beautiful island of Lismore.
John Grace also notes Fairy Foxglove’s presence at the village of Wall in Northumberland. This has led to the romanticised view that the plant came on the boots of Roman centurions stationed along Hadrian’s Wall, having been accidentally picked up during their long march across the Pyrenees en route to Britain. But the dates are completely wrong and “like most really good stories this is almost certainly untrue, in fact a sort of Fairy Story“.
The Wild Flower Finder website has some good photos of Erinus alpinus, as does John Grace’s blog post.
Notes
Note 1 – Page 618, “New Flora of the British Isles“ by Clive Stace, Fourth Edition, 2019.
Note 2 – See the Ontario Rock Garden and Hardy Plant Society website for photos of Erinus alpinus with white flowers – and some useful growing tips.
Note 3 – My first Botany field trip when I was a student at aberdeen University was in late June 1982, when we stayed at Bettyhill. We visited Invernaver, though I don’t remember Fairy Foxglove. My flora at the time was the definitely not pocket sized Keble Martin’s Concise British Flora in Colour. I carried it around with me all week and its pages are still marked with where they got wet in a rain shower as I walked downhill from Invernaver Broch.
Note 4 – See https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/clachan-bridge-known-as-bridge-over-the-atlantic-built-in-late-eighteenth-century-gm840599520-136987609 for a stock photo of the bridge, complete with flowering Erinus alpinus.


















