| Plant
name |
Description |
Flowering
time [UK] |
Abelia

Abelia x grandiflora
A schumannii |
The
majority of the abelias come from China. They are in the Caprifoliaceae
family to which honeysuckles and dipelta
also belong. Hardiness varies but is down to around -15°C.
Abelia chinenis has been a one-time resident in my garden. It
displays heads of scented very pale pink flowers and glossy green
deciduous foliage. It grew well in dry semi shade, but altogether
too well and it was a bit privet-like so it has been banished.
Abelia floribunda is an absolute showstopper and bucks the trend
as it comes from Mexico. Branches drip with long pinky red flared
trumpets in early summer. Rix & Phillips reckon it gets to 2.5m
- 6m, but as you might expect likes warmth, hardy to about -10°C;
so far seems not too unhappy in my mother's more exposed garden in
S.Somerset if a little lower growing.
Abelia x grandiflora is a really good doer, possessing small glossy
semi-evergreen leaves with red and copper tints. It is long flowering
and the red bracts provide an extra flourish when the flowers peter
out later in the season. Starts flowering fairly late in summer but
then goes on for months. Eventually it will make a sprawly shrub to
@2.5m which can be nipped at to keep it in check. Being airy in growth
it provides a gentle structure and background in the garden. The pictured
one is in full sun on clay soil.
Abelia schumannii sports larger deeper pink flowers with darker
markings in the throat. Has a similar habit to A x grandiflora
but lower growing with semi-evergreen less glossy leaves. Slightly
more tender.
Abelia triflora comes from the Himalayas. It used to be in
my town garden as I fell for the scented creamy threesome of flowers
nestled in their furry surrounds. I then saw what size it can get
to as Hidcote has a fine specimen, it has had to be re-located - pity!
Pleasant View Nursery in Devon are an NCCPG
UK abelia collection holder Tel: 01803 813388. |
Summer
- Autumn |
Abutilon
|
I
bought this originally as A.savitzii but I think it may be
'Souvenir de Bonn'. The plant is approx 10 - 12 feet high and is grown
in a pot in a sheltered spot in semi-shade next to the house where
it is protected from fierce frost most years. This is not one to try
to over winter in the open garden, most often you see these plants
used in summer bedding schemes. I have found that it takes a while
to get going in spring in its current position, the flowers being
later than they might be with more sunlight. Tender abutilons come
in a range of colours although the leaves on some are coarser in appearance.
Louis Marignac - sugar pink; Golden Fleece and Canary
Bird - yellow; Nabob - a rich deep red; Boule de Neige
- white, are a few that are available. They take easily from cuttings. |

Souvenir de Bonn |
Acacia

Acacia
baileyana mid Jan |
Wattles,
mimosa call them what you will. In the main they come from Australia
and S.Africa and most are not hardy in the UK. Acacia baileyana
has slightly 'feathery' silvery-green leaves, the more sought after
cultivar is 'Purpurea' the leaves having a metallic purple
cast. This one is growing in a pot outside but a severe frost will
blacken it and put an end to the flowers. I can't detect any scent
which is a pity. Others to try include A.dealbata, A. melanoxylon,
A.retinodes and A. pravissima.
For more on acacias |
Flowering
varies late winter/spring others summer |
Achillea

|
Various Achillea
hybrids including our native Achillea millefolium now come
in a range of colours including pinks, salmons, tawny oranges, crimson
and reds. The flowers rise up on long stems from mats of feathery
cut foliage. Flowering for a long time, the heads often fade to
different shades [some fade more gracefully than others]. Some will
repeat flower on shorter stems if cut back after first flowering.
I have planted 'Fanal' [c] a lightish cherry red, 'Faust'
[b] a fantastic deep crimson with good fade resistance, 'Christl'
[a] maroon and relatively early to flower, 'Marmalade[e]'
and 'Feuerland' [d] which do a yellow to tangy orange thing
or vice versa to different intensities.
They seem to prefer fairly loose soil as a number 'run' and not
too crowded or overshadowed by other plants. I also find that with
me that don't stay for long perhaps they don't like the rather compacted
clay soil.
|

Fanal
June - July |
Agapanthus
[HH/Bb]

Sandringham
|
Nile lilies
are natives of South Africa and colours range from whites through
to intense purple blues. Some are evergreen others die down in the
autumn. Classics for pots providing later summer colour and drama.
The received wisdom is that they like being crowded and fairly warm
and dry, this forces them to flower more prolifically. Didn't work
for me with A. campanulatus 'Alba' but I have found these two more
willing.Sandringhamis
fairly low growing with darkish blue flowers. Golden Rule
has gold lines on the leaves and the heads are similar in size but
on longer stems and flowers a paler blue. Both die down in the winter.
I also have Purple Cloud which is a vigorous evergreen, it
is under partial cover but still gets knocked back by late frosts
and has not so far flowered for me.
For more ideas on more unusual
plants for containers
|

Golden Rule
July - August
|
Amaranthus

h. Intense
Purple |
'Love
Lies Bleeding' an annual loved by traditional bedding schemers. The
RHS garden at Rosemoor in Devon had a good display in 2002. Try the
traditional types in a hanging basket for impact.
Intense
Purple grows up to 120cm with deep purple leaves and red stems. The
'tassels' as you can just see are upright rather than the usual down
hanging tails.
Easy to grow from seed in spring but does need some cosseting prior
to planting out in June. A very rich colour to set others off and
best planted in groups. |
|
Anenome
Anenome nemorosa
Allenii
Bracteata
|
A delicate native
woodland spring flower, Anenome nemorosa [Nemony, Hvitveis,
Smell Smock] likes a soil rich with leafmould. It has long thin
nobbly tubers that can snap easily when being moved but re-planted
should grow on again. They generally grow to between 4 - 6 inches
in height. So far the most reliable flowerer for me is Viridiflora.
The breathtaking
cultivars are the bluey hued Allenii and Robinsoniana.
I am not too keen on the pinks. Apparently 'Allenii' was raised
by a local nurseryman, James Allen in Shepton Mallet, Somerset around
the turn of the last century. 'Allenii' has a purple lilac reverse
to the petals and darker red stems and leaf tints.The inner petal
colour is distinctly darker than 'Robinsoniana'. 'Robinsoniana'
is large flowered with a very pale almost white lilac reverse and
slightly darker lilac within, quite ethereal and also a strong grower.
Vestal is
white but a little fitful in it's appearances, has tight white button
rosettes of flower inside an outer ring of normal petals.
Viridiflora
is all green as it's name suggests, the petals replaced by
leafy bracts. This is more of a curiosity than a 'pretty'. Reminds
me of the 'green man' motif sometimes seen carved in churches. This
anenome seems to be up and flowering appreciably earlier than the
others.
|
March
- April

Viridiflora [with
leaves of Dicentra 'Langtrees'] |
Anthyllis
vulneraria coccinea [Kidney
vetch]
|
Scarlet
and deep red-black forms of our native Kidney Vetch or 'Lady's Fingers'.
You can often see the red tinting on the 'normal' yellow type. A creeping
mat forming plant with slightly silvered foliage, I am not entirely
sure they are displayed at their best here, probably growing over
a low wall would be better. Used by herbalists for healing wounds
and treating coughs. These are shown growing in full sun. During a
hot spell both of these clumps which are from last year curled up
their toes and died.....must try harder. Seeds I took and sowed in
a cold frame in August have germinated. |

May onwards |
Antirrhinum
majus [Snapdragon]
Black
Prince |
I do like 'Snapdragons',
watching pushy bees barging their way into the 'snap' and emerging
well dusted with pollen. A.majus is a perennial, native to
S.Europe but generally grown as an annual.
'Black Prince' flower colour was slightly variable from seed
but mainly in the same range the leaves are purple green to dark
purple. 'Defiance' is a rich deep velvet orange and taller
growing, the leaves have orange tinted backs.
Growing
from seed: the seeds are very small so either don't cover at
all and let the post sowing watering anchor them a little in the
compost or a very light dusting of compost [if using peat free I
tend to find the 'bits' are too big for a light cover]. I sow indoors
in March/early April and put in an unheated but covered propagator
on a windowsill. Once germinated and with a couple of mature leaves,
tease apart the seedlings gently and pot-on. Plant out when large
enough to fend for themselves @ 4-6 inches and danger of frost is
over [May]. Should grow away and flower until the first frosts of
Autumn all other things being equal e.g slugs, rabbits, rain, sun
etc.
|
|
|
Arisaema
|
|
|
|
Arisaema
candidissimum
|
I know very
little about these plants, they belong to the Araceae family which
includes our native Cuckoo Pint, Lords' and Ladies [Arum maculatum].
Cuckoo Pint has a papery greenish spathe and shiny mottled arrow
shaped leaves, in Autumn it reveals itself with bright orange berries.
For the less faint hearted there is the Dracunculus [which I have
never grown] with it's purple velvet upright spathes and smell of
rotting meat - upwind it is a dramatic plant, there was a fantastic
plant at Cotswold Garden Flowers when I visited some years ago.
Arisaema
candidissimum
According
to Rix and Phillips this is a native of pine woods in Western China.
I have had this one for a number of years and it has not increased,
perhaps as suggested it needs more moisture during the growing season
than it gets in my dry soil. In late June it suddenly appears from
nowhere, one minute it's not there and then voilà! The spathe
appears first on a short stem and then the furled up point of the
leaves starts to manifest itself a few days later. The spathe dies
away and the large leaves stay until the Autumn before disappearing
into the odd hard 'corm' underground. It is supposed to be pleasantly
scented but I haven't really noticed. It's very dainty I think.
|
Late
June-July |
|
Arisaema
ciliatum
|
Arisaema
ciliatum
I
know even less about this one, I bought it a couple of years ago
from Bob Brown at Cotswold Garden Flowers. The leaves and the spathes
appear together, the leaves are more finely cut than A. candidissimum
and give the effect of a parasol over the humbug striped spathe.
It is also taller growing. The spathes disappear leaving the leaves
to build up energy for next year's appearance. This one has increased
and this year has produced 3 spathes at different heights which
gives a layered effect.
I have also
grown some A.Jacquemontii [a Himalayan native], from seed,
after 3 years the tiny 'bulbils' have produced a 4" leaf, no
doubt the more patient and attentive gardeners would have had faster
results! [Bob Brown notes that this may be an acid soil lover, I
have it in ericaceous compost].
Chilterns stock seeds of a number of Arisaemas
Paul Christian
has an extensive collection of plants as do Cotswold
Garden Flowers.
|
June
- July |
|
Asplenium
scolopendrium

|
The
Hart's Tongue Fern is plentiful in the woods and shady hedgebanks
here in Somerset, [look don't dig though!]. It has long evergreen
mid green glossy blades which form a 'shuttlecock'. There is a slight
rippling along the surface and edges of the fronds. The height will
vary depending on the growing conditions. |
Evergreen |
Astrantia
Astrantia
Hadspen Blood |
Astrantias are
umbellifers in the same family as Cow Parsley. They are European
natives [not the UK]. Normally a very quiet understated sort of
plant that helps blend showier perennials together, and also good
for naturalistic planting. The 'flower' heads carry-on for a long
time.
Margery Fish
was a fan of astrantias
"A very interesting and unusual variation of Astrantia major
is found in cottage gardens in parts of Gloucestershire. The
bracts are pale green, about three times as long as in the normal
type, and very shaggy. I have never been able to find any name for
this truly decorative flower........."
[from Cottage Garden Flowers, 1961] now it is widely available as
Shaggy.
Hadspen Blood
as you might expect originated at Hadspen, the bracts are a deep
rich purple and it is said to be one of the most intense reds available,
there are others, for example, Ruby Wedding. There are also
'pinks' such as Rosea. Sunningdale Variegated has
creamy yellow variegation on the leaves, looks good in dappled shade
otherwise a bit 'showy'.
Planted in sun or light shade not too dry a soil, astrantias are
hardy and perennial.
|
May
onwards |
Azara
microphylla 'Variegata'
|
A
whiff of chocolate as I walk round the garden, I look up, the Azara
microphylla is in flower. The picture to the left shows the little
yellow sprigs of flowers that burst from buds on the underside of
the branches that look like caterpiller eggs! Hails from S.America
and reputed to be hardier than A. serrata, A. lanceolata, A. dentata,
et al.
Evergreen shrub/smallish tree, and I think quite elegant in growth,
there is a non variegated form which isn't quite as flashy. I have
seen this Azara described as slow growing - I don't think I could
entirely agree, my specimen puts on about 2-3 feet if not more top
growth a year and has to be quite heavily pruned back [it is about
12-15ft tall at the moment]. The initial idea was to train it flat
against trellis to take advantage of it's elegant fishbone growth,
however it has proved a bit feisty for that. |

Shows the branch shape from underneath, you can just see the light
variegated splashing of cream on the leaves.
Evergreen - March |
| Last
Updated March 2006 |
|
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