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Showing posts from September, 2023

When is an aster not an aster?

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Answer: when it is a Symphyotrichum.  In recent years many of the plants we knew as asters or Michaelmas daisies have had their names changed as botanists have been examining their DNA and reclassifying them.  They are in full flower at the moment and butterflies and bees are flocking to them.  Here are some of the ones I've got. Symphyotrichum noveo-angliae 'Purple Dome'.  This is a great plant, growing in a dome shape up to 75cm tall and producing masses of 'vivid violet purple' flowers during September and October.  I bought it at Wisley many years ago and split it about three years ago as the dome grew into an amoeba shape.  I've now got four plants all growing in different light conditions.  Shaded ones take longer to come into flower. Symphyotrichum 'Andenken an Alma Potschke' .  At least I think it is - I was given it by a friend who labelled it 'bright pink'.  It's about a metre tall and falls forward a bit.  It's much admired - I

Autumn Cyclamen

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  When the lovely pink flowers of Cyclamen hederafolium appear it's near the end of summer and the beginning of autumn.  As the flowers fade the leaves appear.  They are ivy-shaped, from which the Latin word 'hederafolium' comes:  Hedera = ivy and folium = leaf.  They have beautiful silvery markings on them which vary from plant to plant.  They provide interesting ground cover throughout autumn and winter.  In spring the leaves die back and the corm beneath the soil lies dormant until the following autumn.   I was given a few corms by my father who was fond of cyclamen.  Now they are all over my garden.  The seeds, found in round cases at the end of a coiled stem, are spread by ants who are attracted by their sweet sticky covering and carry them away.   Watch out for Cyclamen coum , the late winter/early spring flowering variety!