Tropaeolum is one of the hardest-working genera in UK gardening. Most people know the common nasturtium and grow it without realising it belongs to a family that also includes the delicate canary creeper, the vivid climbing flame flower and several other species well worth growing in British conditions. All share the same basic requirements – a warm spot, reasonably free-draining soil and plenty of sun – but they bring very different characters to the garden, from the sprawling ground cover of trailing nasturtiums filling gaps between brassicas to the elegant yellow bells of Tropaeolum peregrinum threading up through a fence. The genus rewards a little exploration beyond the familiar: gardeners who have only ever grown a mixed packet of trailing nasturtiums from the supermarket often discover that the canary creeper or flame flower opens up entirely new possibilities for vertical interest and late-season colour.

The nasturtium in particular has a reputation as a beginner plant and rightly so, but that reputation has led some gardeners to overlook it as too easy or too common. A well-grown nasturtium on a productive plot does several useful jobs simultaneously: it covers bare soil, feeds pollinators, acts as a trap crop for blackfly, provides edible flowers and leaves for the kitchen, and self-seeds reliably to return year after year with almost no effort. Growing tropaeolum well is simply a matter of giving each type the conditions it actually wants – and in the case of the common nasturtium, the conditions it wants are considerably less generous than most gardeners assume.

Types of tropaeolum

The genus Tropaeolum contains around 80 species, of which a handful are commonly grown in UK gardens. Each has distinct characteristics and uses, and choosing the right type for the right situation makes a meaningful difference to results. The annual species are the easiest entry point; the perennial climbing species are more rewarding for established gardens where they can be given a permanent position.

T. majus – Common nasturtium
Annual, trailing or climbing
The most widely grown. Edible flowers and leaves. Excellent trap crop. Sow direct.
T. peregrinum – Canary creeper
Annual climber, to 3m
Delicate yellow fringed flowers. Excellent for covering fences and pergolas quickly.
T. speciosum – Flame flower
Perennial climber, hardy
Brilliant scarlet flowers, prefers cool moist conditions. Spectacular through hedges.
T. tuberosum – Mashua
Perennial, edible tubers
Grown for its edible tubers as well as flowers. Treat like a dahlia – lift in autumn.

Sowing and growing

Annual tropaeolum species are direct-sown into the ground or into containers from March onwards, once the soil has warmed. Nasturtium seeds are large enough to handle easily and can be pushed into the soil to a depth of around 1cm, spacing them 20-30cm apart for trailing varieties and closer for compact bush types. Germination is typically fast – within seven to fourteen days in warm conditions – and seedlings grow rapidly once established. Starting indoors is possible but not advisable: nasturtiums dislike root disturbance and transplanting from modules often sets them back more than it gains.

Mar – Apr
Sow direct outdoors once soil temperature reaches 10°C. Push seeds 1cm deep, 20-30cm apart. Keep moist until germination.
May – Jul
Plants establish quickly. Water in dry spells, especially container-grown plants. First flowers appear from June.
Aug – Sep
Peak flowering period. Deadhead regularly to extend the display. Collect seed if self-seeding is wanted for next year.
Oct – Nov
Annuals blacken after first frost. Clear away. Allow self-seeded plants to remain and they will germinate the following spring.
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Canary creeper needs a head start. Unlike nasturtiums, Tropaeolum peregrinum benefits from sowing indoors in March in individual modules, then planting out in May after hardening off. It grows quickly once established but needs a few weeks indoors to get ahead of slugs and cold nights that can check growth in a cold spring.

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Care and maintenance

The most important thing to understand about growing nasturtiums is that poor soil produces better flowers. In rich, fertile soil the plant puts its energy into leaves – large, lush and beautiful but at the expense of flowers. On a lean, free-draining soil with no added fertiliser, the same plant flowers abundantly from summer through to the first frost. This counterintuitive rule catches out gardeners who assume that the same feeding regime that benefits tomatoes will help their nasturtiums. It will not – and heavy nitrogen feeding is the fastest way to a leafy, flowerless plant. The same principle applies in containers: use a lean compost rather than a rich growing medium, and resist the urge to add slow-release fertiliser granules to the mix.

Watering requirements depend on position and type. Ground-grown nasturtiums in reasonable soil need very little supplementary watering once established and will tolerate dry spells well. Container-grown plants are a different matter – the restricted compost volume dries out quickly in warm weather and consistent moisture is needed to keep them performing. In containers, water when the top inch dries out but do not allow the plant to sit in waterlogged compost, which promotes root rot and stem collapse. Canary creeper and the climbing perennial species need regular moisture more than the annual nasturtiums, and T. speciosum in particular performs best in cool, moist conditions – the west of Scotland suits it better than a dry south-facing London garden. Deadheading spent flowers extends the display significantly for all annual types. Simply snap off finished blooms before they set seed and the plant will continue producing new flowers. If you want the plant to self-seed for the following year, stop deadheading in September and allow seed heads to develop and fall.

Care priorities by species
Species
Feed
Water
Support
T. majus (nasturtium)
None
Low
Optional
T. peregrinum
Low
Moderate
Required – twines
T. speciosum
Low
Moderate
Through host plant
T. tuberosum
Low
Moderate
Required – climbs

Best varieties for UK gardens

The variety choice within Tropaeolum majus alone is considerable. The differences between cultivars cover habit (trailing, climbing or compact), flower colour, leaf variegation and whether the plant is single or double-flowered. For most garden purposes a mixed pack of trailing nasturtiums covers the bases, but the specific varieties below are worth seeking out for particular applications.

Top tropaeolum varieties – ranked by versatility
1
Tropaeolum majus ‘Jewel of Africa’ – Climbing nasturtium with variegated leaves and mixed flower colours. Vigorous, self-seeds freely and looks spectacular scrambling through a fence or over a pergola post.
Most versatile
2
Tropaeolum peregrinum ‘Canary Creeper’ – Fast annual climber producing masses of small bright yellow fringed flowers from July to frost. Covers a fence rapidly and works beautifully alongside climbing roses or through a hornbeam hedge.
Best climber
3
Tropaeolum majus ‘Black Velvet’ – Deep mahogany-red flowers, almost black in low light. Compact and bushy, excellent in containers and pots where the dark colour creates strong contrast with pale companions.
Best in pots
4
Tropaeolum speciosum – Flame flower – Hardy perennial with vivid scarlet flowers and blue-black berries in autumn. At its best scrambling through a dark-leaved hedge like yew or holly, where the contrast is dramatic.
Perennial pick
5
Tropaeolum majus ‘Alaska’ – Compact bush nasturtium with attractively marbled and variegated leaves. Excellent edging plant and particularly decorative in raised beds and kitchen gardens where the foliage earns its keep even without flowers.
Best foliage
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Pests, problems and uses

The nasturtium’s relationship with blackfly is one of the most useful dynamics in the productive garden. Blackfly are strongly attracted to nasturtiums, which makes the plant an effective sacrificial trap crop to draw aphids away from beans and other vulnerable crops nearby. The trap crop strategy works best when nasturtiums are planted at the edges of the growing area rather than interplanted directly. Once the nasturtiums are infested, remove and compost the affected stems to reduce the overall blackfly population on the plot.

Is the nasturtium covered in blackfly?
Check stems and undersides of leaves
Yes
No
Trap crop working
The nasturtium is doing its job. Remove and compost heavily infested stems. Plant has protected your beans and brassicas. Consider this a success.
No pest issue yet
Continue monitoring. Check weekly in warm weather. Ensure nasturtiums are positioned at plot edges as a perimeter trap crop.

Caterpillars of the large and small white butterfly also feed on nasturtium leaves, which again makes the plant a useful decoy crop alongside brassicas. The edible qualities of nasturtiums extend beyond the flowers: the leaves have a peppery, watercress-like flavour and work well in salads, the unripe seeds can be pickled as a substitute for capers, and the flowers make a vivid garnish. Few plants deliver as much practical value per square metre of growing space. On a productive plot growing a range of vegetables, having a patch of nasturtiums at the border is simply good practice – they support pollinators, protect neighbouring crops, provide edible material and self-seed freely to return without any effort the following year. Paired with companion plants like borage or planted alongside crops that benefit from pollinator support such as courgettes and climbing beans, nasturtiums earn their place every season.