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This plant looks like the cultivar Isis of the campanulatus group. I believe there are many look alikes in this Group, though and it's a pity that this group is now less noticed of and breeding is more in the direction of bigger flowers.I started growing this plant commercially about 40 years ago and I have never covered the plants in winter. In the eighties we had some very severe winters as well and I remember we forgot to cover the stock plants and were very surprised to see they were still alive.It seems to me one of the most hardy forms of Agapanthus!I still have a plant in the garden and it is a reliable flowerer, the fowers being rather small though. I always cut the flowers after flowering because it seeds freely, although the seedlings differ not so much from the mother plants.My plant originally came from Eric Smith, where it was acquired by our good friend Eberhard Fluche. Isis was raised and named by Alan Bloom. Agapanthus Isis