Earlier in the week I blogged about the many and various plants that I grow in pots. I thought I’d zoom in on half a dozen for this week’s six. We had a little rain overnight but it’s sunny again now; much of what is in the ground looks jaded.
One.
Impatiens auricoma x bicaudata. We’ve been growing this for years in the greenhouse; it’s easy to propagate and grow and it flowers for months. Until this year it never occurred to me to try planting it in the garden. It’s doing really well but it’s not hardy so it won’t survive the winter, unless we get no frost at all, which could happen. I plan to leave it out and overwinter young plants.
Two.
Eucomis montana. We do have a couple of Eucomis planted out, though not this species. This is overwintered under the greenhouse bench, completely dry, then brought out late winter when it shows signs of growth. It gets put out the front in full sun and produces these very striking flower spikes. Striking in the visual sense, but also in the olfactory sense. Malodorous, foetid, mephitic, noisome, rank, putrid; take your pick, the fly went with ‘yummy’.
Three.
Eucomis vandermerwei ‘Octopus’. Another of these South African bulbous plants that we keep in a pot. It’s much smaller than E. montana, around 6ins tall, with leaves densely spotted purple to match the flowers. It gets treated the same, dry all winter, plenty of water when in growth, liquid feed when I remember it. You can propagate Eucomis from leaf cuttings, a bit like Sanseveria.
Four.
Hakonechloa macra ‘Nicolas’. Philip Oostenbrink, writing in the August edition of ‘The Garden’, advises buying this in autumn and selecting a plant with good colour. It should colour red but even though the plants are propagated vegetatively, they vary a lot in how well they colour. My assumption when I bought mine would have been that the more strongly coloured plants were the ones that were under stress and best avoided and that if they were all members of a clone they’d all perform the same under the same conditions. There’s not a trace of colour on mine.
Five.
Echinopsis hybrid. When it’s hot these open early evening and last barely 24 hours. The whites and pale pinks have a light but lovely perfume; I’m not sure about this one.
Six.
Agave montana. This came from Nick Macer at Pan Global Plants quite a number of years ago. It originates from one of the coldest parts of Mexico and is reckoned to be one of the most suitable species for growing outdoors in the UK. Though ours is in a pot, it has stayed outside for several years now, the pot is 16 inches diameter. We are sparing with feeding and with watering from early autumn, so it is grown hard, improving its chances of surviving cold weather. There are several in the gardens on St Michaels Mount and at Tremenheere, in West Cornwall, all in rude health.
We went down to Penzance on Thursday, visited St Michael’s Mount, Tremenheere and the National Dahlia Collection at Varfell. All are still showing the after-effects of the winter, especially the Dahlias, which hardly had time to get going before they were hit by drought. Theirs are way behind mine, which made me feel better about mine but worse about theirs. We had lunch at Tremenheere, which was excellent. Cheered up the gardener by asking which species of Xanthorrhoea the large specimens there were (X. glauca). Nobody had asked her that before, they usually ask how many gardeners work there. (I don’t know, I didn’t ask, probably just her) Here’s a couple of pictures to whet your appetite.
Meme host The Propagator is on holiday for a couple of weeks so presumably he will be checking in from some exotic location.
My hak mac is still small. I think it is sulking about being divided. I might have to buy a bigger plant for the effect I desire.
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They’re not keen on being divided. That one of mine has grown massively in its second year, took a while to settle in.
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I like the look of your Hakonechloa macra ‘Nicolas’ even if it hasn’t turned the colour you hoped yet. It has a lovely shape and I imagine it is wonderful to swish your fingers through.
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I want to put some of my other varieties into pots, especially the more weeping ones.
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Both the eucomis are very interesting plants, from a visual perspective. Other than the impatiens, none of your selection are plants I would typically gravitate to, but seeing your collection of pots under #2, I see how the eucomis add varied foliage to the colourful blooms of the other plants, along w/the begonia (which I usually have in my own garden). You, along w/some of the other SoSers, may widen my horizons a little bit. Heavens, how will I cope?
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You don’t come across as someone who’s led a sheltered life, or come to that, as someone whose horizons need widening. You’ll cope, and then some. Sue and I visited a friends garden a few days back, full of good plants that I loved, hardly any of which I grow, and adding up to a garden with a very different feel from ours. It smacks of cliché, but more feminine in some indefinable way. I keep on buying and planting things that I like and that I think I have a place for, it seems to work out as a very wide ranging set of choices. I know most people’s plant choices are impulse buys and am content that most of mine are two. I don’t over think it and I don’t have a plan.
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But what can happen w/impulse buys, like ones clothing, is there can be a general theme to those choices, so the overall impact blends well. Maybe too well, sometimes. Open my closet & there’s a swath of burgundy. And that’s what I liked about that photo – the lovely, small blooms, then this beautifully different foliage & height from the eucomis. And . . . mentioning Sue reminds me, did she ever give permission to feature her press flowers? If so, I missed it & would love the link.
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Oh Jim – such interesting plants and a peek at all those cacti in the greenhouse – just wonderful. I feel very much a beginner.
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A fabulous six. You are such a collector. I’m in awe of the variety of plants you put up each week, inspiring me to move out of my comfort zone! But maybe not the eucomis. My choice was mephitic.
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Seeing what other people grow is the best bit of SoS for me, my wanted list gets added to every week. I am an insatiable collector, which is both a blessing and a curse.
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I saw the Impatiens and the Eucomis at the Hardy Exotics nursery yesterday and almost bought one of the Eucomis. Now I know what it smells like I am glad I didn’t. I was tempted by several other plants though including a very small Agave americana – hopeful it will grow big and strong like those on St Michael’s Mount. We lunch at Tremenheere now and again, they do lovely food there and we like to stroll in the garden afterwards. A very different Cornish garden. I usually end up buying several succulents from their nursery too…
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We managed to escape Tremenheere without buying any plants and drove past Hardy Exotics without stopping because we were knackered and wanted to get home for a cup of tea. It’s only Eucomis montana that really smells bad, the others hardly at all.
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Alright. Then maybe I will make a return visit 😀 I did fancy a couple of the Hedychium and the purple stemmed Colocasia too!
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Next time you could pop in here for a cuppa! I have Yorkshire tea 🙂
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Oo! We drink Yorkshire tea! I might just take you up on that. Consider the invite reciprocated too, should you be in the Liskeard area.
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Too bad the Eucomis is so stinky. It is a striking plant.
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Very interested in your Eucomis, I wonder how you overwinter them : just the bulbs in dry pot in your gh? The frost didn’t affect them? The big picture of the first is gorgeous ! Otherwise, I also had an agave that did not resist in winter … maybe too wet in the pot …My greenhouse isn’t frost-free or isolated ( -5°C out -2° in the edges of the gh but +1° in the center)
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The Eucomis go under the bench in the cactus house which I aim to keep frost free but only just. They will take a few degrees below if they’re dry. You need the right species of Agave and it shouldn’t be grown soft.
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Eucomis might smell awful, but it has a very interesting flower in close-up.I wonder does your Impatiens self seed well? If so, it won’t matter if it doesn’t last because presumably new plants will pop up when the time is right. Your greenhouse looks very nice btw.
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I’ve not seen seed on the Impatiens and being a hybrid who knows what you’d get. I should try crossing it with I. omeiana, except that’s all died down in the dry.
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