Pyrus phaeocarpa in the Yorkshire Arboretum: a wild pear from central China that produces consistently excellent autumn colour. |
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Just a portrait: Pyrus phaeocarpa
Thursday, 24 October 2013
Diverse daisies - a further selection of October composites.
I've always called this Argyranthemum 'Jamaica Primrose', but it's probably actually 'Levada Cream'. Either way, one of my favourite plants and still covered in flowers. |
Dahlia 'Etheral' has been a delight for months: this was taken this morning. |
Cosmos bipinnatus 'Psyche White' has really helped to fill up the borders in their first year. |
A picture from a couple of weeks ago, Helianthus 'Carine' has now nearly finished. It is a slightly shorter, less rampant and more floriferous version of 'Lemon Queen' |
Helianthus salicifolius 'Bitter Chocolate' is now slighly less vertical than when this picture was taken earlier in the month, but is still flowering magnificently. Stout support next year! |
A pleasing combination of Solidago 'Fireworks', Sambucus 'Black Lace, Helianthus 'Carine' and Monarda 'Gardenview Scarlet' (also about two weeks ago). |
Monday, 21 October 2013
Michaelmas daisies
The indispensable 'Little Carlow' in the foreground with S. novae-angliae 'Helen Picton' behind it, and 'Ochtendgloren' conspicuous in the distance. |
S. novi-belgii 'Melbourne Magnet' (soft mauve): 'Beechwood Charm' and 'Ochtendgloren', with salvias and a diversity of other daisies. |
'Ochtendgloren' is superb, great tall stems with clouds of pink flowers: here paired with the compact Salvia uliginosa 'Ballon Azul'. |
An early morning pic of 'Beechwood Charm', a good rich dark pink with small flowers. |
S. novae-angliae 'Rosa Sieger': the New England asters are my favourites. |
A mix of Michaelmas daisies: the purple one in the foreground has slipped its label: S. novae-angliae 'Helen Picton' and 'Nicholas' behind. |
Wednesday, 16 October 2013
Autumn posy
20 October: for those who want to know, in approximately clockwise sequence from the bottom, the plants are: Scabiosa 'Blue
Butterflies'; Nigella papillosa ‘Midnight’;
Cyclamen hederifolium; Symphyotrichum novae-angliae 'Helen Picton'; Hosta yingeri; Symphyotrichum
novae-angliae 'Primrose Upward' Symphyotrichum novi-belgii 'Beechwood Charm'; Diascia rigescens; Plectranthus
argentatus; Persicaria amplexicaulis
'Orangefields' (pale), 'JS Caliente'; Lathyrus
'Matucana'; Dahlia 'Dark Desire'; Symphyotrichum 'Little Carlow'; Aconitum 'Spatlese'; Pennisetum setaceum; Allium hookeri; Symphyotrichum 'Ochtendgloren'; Symphyotrichum
novae-angliae ‘Rosa Sieger’; Colchicum 'Glory of Threave'; Fuchsia 'Ian Storey'
A posy I made for a friend's birthday recently. Any guesses at the 20 different flowers visible? |
Friday, 11 October 2013
Scotland, day two: Edinburgh
Gentiana x macaulayi 'Wells' Variety' |
The solid but elegant palm house at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. |
We started our day at 'the Botanics' with a committee meeting, and members of the Woody Plant Committee then gave a series of short talks at a public session in the newly (and beautifully) renovated lecture theatre. Milling about before and afterwards gave a nice opportunity to catch up with several Scottish friends, seen only too seldom. After lunch we finally got outside, on a tour led by David Knott, the Curator, though trying to keep WPC members together in a garden full of interesting plants is really a bit hopeless. Many trees were lost or badly damaged in a storm in January 2012, and, as is the way with such things, the scars were pointed out almost as a badge of honour. The scarring is most evident in the collection's keepers, however, for whom it was a very traumatic event. But as with all such episodes, space is created for new plantings and opportunities, and the majority of trees survived unaffected. Many thanks to all who made it such an enjoyable visit.
Toxicodendron vernicifluum was just turning yellow. |
Sorbus muliensis was named recently from this tree at RBG Edinburgh, grown from seed collected by George Forrest in Sichuan in 1922. |
A fine plant labelled Ceratostigma minus was much admired on the rock garden. |
Big patches of autumnal Asiatic gentians were catching the bright sun, but opening only tentatively in the chilly wind. (Gentiana x macaulayi 'Wells' Variety, again.) |
The sumptuous flowers of Roscoea purpurea Royal Purple Group are combined with purple-flushed foliage. |
Nerine bowdenii catching the sun beneath a warm wall. |
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Two days in Scotland: Dawyck
Great conifers dominate Dawyck Botanic Garden, but are in scale with the landscape. The two largest trees are 'original' Sequoiadendron from the 1850s. |
Dawyck is of exceptional interest, having had good trees planted there for about four hundred years, from the Veitch family in the 1600s, to the Naesmyths from 1691 and the Balfours from 1897 to 1978, when the garden was passed to the care of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, of which it now forms one of the satellite sites. A giant Abies alba survives from the 1690s in the garden, and there are more nearby, but the garden is a classic reflection of the 19th Century interest in conifers and the trees chart the early introductions. Most noteworthy, perhaps, are numerous huge Douglas Firs, Pseudotsuga menziesii, grown from David Douglas's own collections in the 1820s. The tall Sequoiadendron at the foot of the garden are also 'originals' grown from seed sent back to Britain in the 1850s, and there are fine old specimens of many other, rarer species. Into this collection the Royal Botanic Garden has interpolated many recent accessions of both conifers and broad-leaved trees, with Sorbus and Betula being particularly conspicuous at this season. As it is an extremely cold site anything growing there has to be fully hardy.
Euonymus sieboldianus with conifers. |
The very spiny Oplopanax horridus (Araliaceae) thrives in the cold climate of Dawyck: it's not easy to grow in milder locations. |
The aptly named Sorbus amoena - amoena meaning 'beautiful or pleasing' |
Sorbus commixta |
Betula alleghaniensis |
The original Dawyck Beech. |
Monday, 7 October 2013
Colesbourne reflections
I was back at Colesbourne last Friday to lead an International Dendrology Society Study Day and late in the afternoon had the fortune to catch the lake at its reflective best - images above. No comment needed, I think. Below are a few scenes from elsewhere in the garden.
It was interesting to see how the herbaceous border looked, 16 months after planting (see post 14 June 2012). |
Drifts of Cyclamen hederifolium planted in 2003 - they have never looked better. |
Cercidiphyllum in the evening light. |
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