Plant
of the Month - February 2005
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This
Crocus (tommasinianus 'Whitewell Purple') is
one of the wonders of spring, although today (13th) with snow
on the mountains,
one does wonder if winter
has really relinquished
its icy grip! The honey bees work these during sunny spells when it
is not too cold resulting in pollen sacs with characteristic
red pollen. These corms are a new planting as has been mentioned
in what's new. Hopefully they will increase
each year and provide some delight to everyone passing. |
Plant
of the Month - March 2005
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March
1st - being Welsh myself, this day has to be celebrated with
one of the traditional emblems of Wales - the Daffodil. There
is nothing to
beat the beauty and sophistication of the wild species, Narcissus
pseudonarcissus (2nd thumbnail). This is the true
emblem and it seems an irony that people wear all these other blowsy
hybrids in their button holes. It is interesting that no matter what
plant genus you could mention, our efforts to 'improve' the original
species seem to have lost this delicacy. We cannot better nature
itself! The third thumbnail is another perhaps wild species - the Tenby
daffodil Narcissus pseudonarcissus 'Lobularis'. Whilst very
common and looking very naturalised in parts of Pembroke, it seems
probable
that it was introduced from Northern Spain several centuries ago -
perhaps. Last year the origins of the Welsh name for the Daffodil were
discussed and I would refer you to that discussion.
By the way, the two species of Narcissus above are obtained
from commercial sources not wild collected. |
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Plant
of the Month - April 2005
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A
North American plant, Camassia leichtlinii subsp. leichtlinii,
which comes into growth early in this garden, it is a wonderful
sight with tall spires of intense blue. It
is
easy to grow
and slowly increases and there is a good clump growing near
the path up to the side. It has been there for at least ten
years and reliably flowers every season in April. It is said
to be good for naturalizing in grass, which reminds me
that
I
must
try
this
out in the lawn so
there is colour after the Crocus tommasinianus have
finished flowering. |
Plant
of the Month - May 2005
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At
long last, this plant has over wintered and still is healthy.
Other plants of Myosotidium hortensia I have tried usually
last one season, fail to flower and die. Slug killer is as
usual
essential otherwise
the leaves
are ripped to shreds.
It
grows
by one of
the water butts
in gravel which is constantly moist and has had three flower heads.
Will it set seed? - we shall see. It is a plant that grows
wild in the Chatham Island, New Zealand, usually
close
to the
sea in wet,
moist areas. It is said to be borderline hardy in the UK. |
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Plant
of the Month - June 2005
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Embothrium
conccineum Lanceolatum group,
what a wonderful and spectacular plant. To convey how spectacular
it is and how its common name is so appropriate - the Chilean Fire
Tree - is difficult and hopefully the first photograph goes some
way to give some idea of how the flowers can glow as if they are
on fire. This has to be the plant of the month. |
Plant
of the month - July 2005
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How
many times have I tried to get this plant established, both
in this garden and others I have planted?
It typically languishes and fades into oblivion! I planted Tropaeolum
speciosum obtained from Crug Farm last year and planted it
at the base of a Pinus strobus seedling (now 12 feet high)
and promptly forgot about it until this July when one morning walking
up the
path onto the side, there it was in all its glory. Now some
people say
it can become a weed, well, what is the definition of a weed? This
plant certainly will never be unwelcome in this garden. |
Plant
of the month - August 2005
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A
Salvia with a difference - Salvia omeiana BWJ
8062 'Crûg Thundercloud' - it grows in shade and in humousy
soil that does not dry out. This is a wonderful plant
with yellow flowers has been selected by
Bleddyn from Crûg Farm. The underside of the leaves in this
selection are of the darkest purple and the challenge is to show
this feature to its best as well. It was found in E'meishan, Sichuan,
China in 2000 and has been given a varietal name 'Crûg Thundercloud'.
If you grow this from seed, some plants will have green undersides
to
the leaves
and
are not
as
desirable, hence the varietal selection and all seedlings with this
dark purple underside to the leaf have the above varietal name.
When you buy it, do not be put off by its straggly habit - it does
not
look
its
best
in
pot
culture,
but
put this
in the ground
and wow, you really do have a plant of distinction. The next question
is whether this plant will go into general horticulture - it should,
it really deserves to, but will it? How does a plant actually stand
the test of time? Is it because some huge company decides to propagate
it and it lands up in B&Q (dread the thought)? We are back to
trends in gardening and luckily there are some of us who ignore the
latest
fashions and just get on with growing good garden plants - and
this is one of them. |
Plant
of the month -September 2005
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Wonderful
and quite spectacular example of the genus Hedychium -
the Ginger family - Hedychium densiflorum 'Assam Orange'.
This is a good garden plant and far hardier than one imagines
but needs
to
be put in a warm sunny spot in our growing zone. It is strong
growing and forms a large clump; the flowers are
an
usual colour break
and are nicely scented. It is also an useful addition to the group
of late flowering plants in our gardens. In
colder areas mulching during the winter months would be strongly
advised.
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Plant
of the month - October 2005
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| Mahonia confusa has wonderful
foliage, attractive divided leaves with a glaucous white underside.
The flowers are pale yellow and quite small but flowering during
this month making it a valuable plant in the garden. It has a quite
sophistication and that is what makes it so endearing. Honey bees
have not been seen on this yet as all the other Mahonias are
popular with the bees for nectar. |
Plant
of the month - November 2005
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| Sarcococca wallichii is one of
those gems introduced by Bleddyn from Crug. Even when not in bloom,
the fresh green foliage is a bonus with much larger leaves than usual
for the Sarcococcas we are used to in general cultivation.
The flowers are insignificant but wonderfully scented. On one of
the days the flowers were being photographed, the flowers were covered
by tiny insects. So far the plants grown in this garden seem to withstand
the frost levels we normally withstand, who knows what will happen
with a really hard winter, but this comment probably applies to a
great many plants grown here! |
Plant
of the month - December 2005
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| A real gem this time of the year, I have
fallen in love with this plant. Ruscus aculeatus has been
grown in gardens for centuries, it can stand drought and shade, it
is a more of a peculiarity with its characteristic spiny cladodes
with its true leaves reduced to tiny appendages. Plants tend to be
unisexual and therefore to have the red berries, both sexes have
to be planted. There are hermaphrodite clones in commerce. This plant
is not R. aculeatus but another species with a mediterranean
distribution - R. hypoglossum 'John Redmond'. This is considerably
smaller than R. aculeatus and the berries are impressive
and at Christmas they are a brilliant red. This is very slow growing
and is said to come true from seed and to have originated
as a sport of
R.hypoglossum in a garden in Southern Ireland. I have no
idea how accurate this story is, facts can get distorted. |
| Oh dear another year almost gone as this
is being written. There have been a lot of new plantings over the
year mostly originating from Crug Farm Nurseries. The acid test is
whether or not these pants survive to next year in a healthy state.
Plants with an untested, unproven horticultural origin, first or
second generation wild collected do really come with a 'health warning',
i.e. do not expect them all to survive! We shall see and undoubtedly
we shall see further additions to the failures page! |
| 'Human
subtlety will never devise an invention more beautiful, more
simple, more direct than does Nature, because in her inventions
nothing is lacking and nothing is superfluous .'
- Leonardo da Vinci . |