What wild flowers have you seen?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostJust give up grow a 'wild garden' gradus! One can always justify a semi-wilderness...we do....on environmental grounds.
Actually, I'm not quite sure what a wild onion is. Is it a particular species? And what colour flowers do they produce? If we've got them, they're probably indistinguishable among the wild everything else.
Edible and with a strong onion smell. I doubt I've rid the garden of it as it self-seeds everywhere.
Not a weed but a giant Nicotiana Sylvestris grew in our garden last year fully 6 feet tall with huge leaves and enormous flower spikes. This was certainly not a problem as it has the sweetest of evening scents but surprisingly it grew in the intersection of 2 walls where extreme dryness might be expected and it positively thrived in last Summer's scorching temperatures. I cut it back in the Autumn and it is now producing the first leaves of new growth. A little further along two other large versions of the plant also grew, all of them presumably from seed dropped by plants in former years. I saved seed and have sown some to see if it comes true and I can raise a new super-large form of the plant, if anyone is interested I'd be happy to send some seed if you PM me.
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How things change.. Global warming? Here's what it says in Collins Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers. I can't find a publication date, but we must have bought it in the late 1960s.
"Habitat: Locally abundant on moist banks and roadsides, usually not far from the sea in Devon, Cornwall and the Channel Islands, much less so in S. Wales and S. Ireland; very rare elsewhere. April - June."
No mention of its being an 'invasive' or 'introduced' species. And we saw it flowering in Feb. this year. We see it in Brittany too.
Interestingly, there is a wooded path which leads from a beach in Cornwall up to a village about a mile inland. The seaward end has banks full of 3-cornered leek, but about halfway along, they peter out to be replaced with ordinary wild garlic.
We've never thought of eating them, as we rather treasured their presence. But now they're so common, we'll maybe try using the leaves as if they were chives.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostIt looks like this:https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=wi...w=1536&bih=710
Edible and with a strong onion smell. I doubt I've rid the garden of it as it self-seeds everywhere.
Not a weed but a giant Nicotiana Sylvestris grew in our garden last year fully 6 feet tall with huge leaves and enormous flower spikes. This was certainly not a problem as it has the sweetest of evening scents but surprisingly it grew in the intersection of 2 walls where extreme dryness might be expected and it positively thrived in last Summer's scorching temperatures. I cut it back in the Autumn and it is now producing the first leaves of new growth. A little further along two other large versions of the plant also grew, all of them presumably from seed dropped by plants in former years. I saved seed and have sown some to see if it comes true and I can raise a new super-large form of the plant, if anyone is interested I'd be happy to send some seed if you PM me.
Incidentally the page of images demonstrates why latin names are useful; wild onion covers a multitude of plants!
Nicotiana is a short-lived perennial in suitable climates but tender in this country so grown as an annual. It does self-seed, and the rootstock may over-winter as you have discovered. Occasional seedlings of N. sylvestris still pop-up in one of the borders where I do volunteer gardening, more than 5 years after the original plants were bedded out. It's impressive and always attracts the public interest, but having such large leaves and being so tall in what is something of a wind tunnel border is a problem.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostHow things change.. Global warming? Here's what it says in Collins Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers. I can't find a publication date, but we must have bought it in the late 1960s.
"Habitat: Locally abundant on moist banks and roadsides, usually not far from the sea in Devon, Cornwall and the Channel Islands, much less so in S. Wales and S. Ireland; very rare elsewhere. April - June."
No mention of its being an 'invasive' or 'introduced' species. And we saw it flowering in Feb. this year. We see it in Brittany too.
Interestingly, there is a wooded path which leads from a beach in Cornwall up to a village about a mile inland. The seaward end has banks full of 3-cornered leek, but about halfway along, they peter out to be replaced with ordinary wild garlic.
We've never thought of eating them, as we rather treasured their presence. But now they're so common, we'll maybe try using the leaves as if they were chives.
Hottentot Fig is another that does well here despite appearances and origin. https://www.plantlife.org.uk/uk/disc.../hottentot-fig
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostToday saw my first wild garlic flower this year.
I was rather surprised by this from the National Trust
which seems from the tone of the text to be aimed at children. I thought the message these days is to leave things in the wild to avoid damage and risk of incorrect identification. If it's OK to pick wild garlic how do you get across that picking bluebells isn't OK(one of those images is of a bluebell wood not garlic). Wonder if the foraging carte-blanche applies to other wild food on NT sites.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostCelandine are coming through. Pretty yellow flowers but invasive and I do try to remove them, making sure as far as possible to root out all the little tubers. Ongoing annual struggle.
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They are amazing aren't they? When I was a child there was an escarpment rising behind the housing estate where I lived and the rabbit bitten turf was covered with orchids - first early purple and then the bee. We had some appear briefly under a hedge in the carpark where I work, but they haven't flowered the past couple of years. If it was ever returned to close grazed pasture they would appear again I'm sure, but for now the conditions don't suit them.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
Photographed by Mrs A couple of days ago. A meadow full of them. Unbelievable mimicry of a bee.And the tune ends too soon for us all
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