Spring 2026Container grown trees available for delivery from week commencing 20th April onwards.
01759 392007

Princess Margaret magnolia

£0.00
Magnolia campbellii Princess Margaret blossom
  • Flowering month: April
  • Blossom colour: Pink

An English Magnolia featuring large beautiful pink flowers.

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Princess Margaret magnolia for sale

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Tree specification

Photos of trees as supplied | Tree sizes and forms

Sorry we have not produced any trees of this variety this season.

Delivery charges

Delivery for a single tree starts at £9.95, it is calculated based on your postcode.

All about Princess Margaret magnolia

Princess Margaret is an early-flowering Magnolia, featuring large mauve-pink flowers.

Growing and Training

To avoid damage to the flowers plant in a sheltered position.

History

Magnolias are a primitive genus, and this can be seen in the way the inner petals and outer protective sepals of the flower are undifferentiated.  Magnolias are therefore usually considered to have tepals, rather than separate petals and sepals. The relative lack of protection for the flower is one of the reasons that all Magnolias do best in sheltered situations.

Princess Margaret is a seedling of Magnolia campbellii 'Alba' crossed with Magnolia sargentiana and was raised on the royal estate at Windsor in the 1950s.


Princess Margaret characteristics

Growing

  • Gardening skillBeginner

Identification

  • Country of originUnited Kingdom
  • Period of origin1950 - 1999
  • Flowering monthApril
  • Blossom colourPink

British-grown trees Trees grown in the UK.

Unlike many garden centres and online retailers, the vast majority of our fruit trees are grown in the UK. Find out more.

All our trees are certified under the Plant Healthy scheme, supervised by the Plant Health Alliance. Other stakeholders include Defra and the RHS. Find out more.

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When you buy your fruit tree from Orange Pippin Fruit Trees we guarantee it for the first season in your garden while it gets established. If it doesn't grow successfully, we'll either replace it the following season or offer a refund, subject to some conditions. Find out more.

More about magnolia

Magnolias are one of the most ancient of flowering trees, and are today grown primarily for their attractive flowers. The flowers are primitive, and the petals lack the protective sepals found in most flowering trees which evolved later. Instead they have tepals, which perform both functions - and this is the main reason why it is best to plant Magnolias in sheltered locations.

Compared to other flowering ornamental trees, Magnolias seem to have an unusually wide colour palette, with white, pink, yellow, purple, and red varieties available. Many species are deciduous but there are also semi-evergreen and full evergreen varieties. The genus is also geographically spread, with both Asian and American species. This diversity is perhaps a result of the great age of this genus, which dates back almost 100 million years, to a time when the continents we know today did not exist.

Magnolias do best in well-drained soils and sheltered conditions, but they need plenty of water over the summer - use a mulch to help retain moisture. They are tolerant of clay and some varieties will also tolerate chalk, but they generally prefer neutral or slightly acidic conditions. Many are also tolerant of air pollution so are a good choice for city gardens.

Magnolias do not like to be transplanted, so plant the tree directly in its final position. They have quite shallow roots, so avoid planting anything else nearby.

To encourage flowering use small applications of tomato fertilizer over the summer.

Magnolias are mostly very cold-hardy and suitable for all areas of the UK, but paradoxically frost can easily spoil the appearance of the blossom, hence the recommendation to plant in a sheltered position.

Magnolias generally need little or no pruning - but can be pruned hard after the spring flowering is over if necessary. Pruning can be used to check the height of the tree - remove the thicker branches and prune back to the smaller flower-bearing newer shoots. You can also remove lower shoots to give a more tree-like appearance, although many Magnolias have a naturally shrub-like habit and will produce new shoots from low down on the main stem.

Magnolias don't usually produce nectar (they arose before insects evolved) so are not particularly helpful for bees, but many of them produce seeds which are attractive to wildlife.

Most of our Magnolias are grafted on to Magnolia kobus rootstocks - which are robust and hardy, and do not produce suckers.

Hybrid Magnolias are likely to flower within 1-2 years after planting.  Older varieties may take 3-4 years, and possibly as long as 5 years for species such as Magnolia sprengeri.


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