These are six things from my garden, noted yesterday and posted this Saturday to join in with other gardeners over on Jim's blog, where if you are tempted to join in you will find guidance.
1. Let us start with a plant that caught the sunshine even if it came out very briefly this week. It has quite surprised me as I don't recall having moved it to what was the old vegetable bed.
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| Eranthis hyemalis |
Could it be that a squirrel dug it up from the Conservatory Bed, and reburied it and forgot about it? However I have read that Winter aconites contain cardiac glycosides, making the bulbs, roots, and foliage poisonous to squirrels and other rodents. That must be a plus for this plant, and maybe I ought to get more or grow some from seed collected from this one as it is such a good doer.
2. If I was to single out from amongst the several snowdrops currently in bloom in the garden, for this week it ought to be Galanthus Lapwing. Since receiving one bulb from Anna in 2019, it has now made up a good clump in the Conservatory bed. A lovely snowdrop named by the late Gloucestershire plantsman Phil Cornish in 1997.
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| Galanthus Lapwing |
The variety really liked this garden and therefore rather than dividing the clump I bought another pot and placed it in the larger bed not far away from the Cornus controversa 'Variegata' which I planted out last January.
3. There are different form of Cyclamen coum, and this one with silver leaves and the darker Christmas tree center and pale pink flowers is a little treasure. In winter the leaves I feel give a worthwhile ground cover.
4. Evergreen plants are a definite plus in the garden, and this year so far Fatsia japonica 'Spider's Web' has been quite resilient.Certainly in the days with poor light, it shines out.
5. Another shrub that for me lights up the garden are the Euonymus fortunei 'Blondy'. These were ones I took from cuttings so feel quite chuffed with these.
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| Euonymus fortunei 'Blondy' |
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| Oncostema formerly known as Scilla |
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| Oncostema hughii |








These snowdrops with the cyclamen background are really cute. And the backlit photo is very pretty. Oncostema hughii is in the same family as Scilla peruviana: what are the differences if you know them? The leaves look prettier. Are the flowers identical?
ReplyDeleteThere has recently been a movement of these two from the species Scilla to Oncostema. There is a difference with the leaves of O hughii being broader which lie flatter to the ground, and the flowers are larger, have a stronger colour etc. The O. hughii comes from the small island off the coast of Sicily, and the O 'Peruviana' grows over a larger geographical area. I find it somewhat strange that the RHS gives incorrect guidance for planting of the bulb, I shall contact them. This is a much better source: https://www.rareplants.co.uk/product/scilla-hughii/
DeleteSo I prefer O.Hughii leaves I think....thanks for all your explanations
DeleteThe eranthis is lovely, I think I might have had one of those but it's nowhere to be seen now.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Galanthus Lapwing is a super snowdrop, mine bulked up very quickly and now needs splitting. Your star plant for me is your Fatsia Spiders Web, I have just the spot in the shade for one so must remember when I next go to the garden Centre!
ReplyDeleteI think they would benefit from a little sun, I think this one is almost too shaded, and the adjacent hydrangea is rather overshadowing it, and I have a mind to cut that back this year.
DeleteOh no, another change of name from lovely and simple to "let me check the spelling". Thanks for the education, I had no idea. You have some beautiful cyclamen, the ones you sent me are doing well but haven't flowered yet. I'm sure they will soon enough. Have a good week, Sis.
ReplyDeleteDid I send you C hederifolium which flower in the summer or C coum which should be flowering now?
DeleteWell that's news to me about Scilla peruviana. I hate these name changes. G. Lapwing is a beauty and I love your cyclamen.
ReplyDeleteYour bulbs and cyclamen are lovely! And I like how you included a note about Scilla's name being changed. I looked it up - very interesting with the new classifications.
ReplyDeleteI have just looked up the Oncostema hughii - what a gorgeous looking thing it is, and now goes on my wishlist! You have some lovely cyclamen too - my C coum must all hiding under ivy or leaf litter in the woodland. I added one of those fatsia to the entrance border a few months ago and today was just thinking the same, that it lights up the border really well.
ReplyDeletegreat garden...the Fatsia japonica is new to me and I really like it.
ReplyDeleteThat's intriguing regarding the Winter aconites! I love the combination of the 'Lapwing/Peewit' Snowdrop and Cyclamens. Very pretty indeed.
ReplyDelete