Six on Saturday – 11/10/2025

Well, storm Amy came and went and we’re all still here. Seems a long time ago. I don’t know how other people in the UK fared but there was no significant damage done in our garden and the slow autumnal descent into chaos continues at a very leisurely pace. There are lots of flowers still, but most of them are over the hill, thinning out, looking tatty. However, there are a couple of exceptions and a few new arrivals, so I’ve scraped up a six.

Six on Saturday is a meme started by “The Propagator” in 2017. I took over hosting around 2022. It’s the simplest of ideas; post pictures of six things happening in your garden on a Saturday and post a link in the comments down below. Need more info? It’s all here. We’d love you to join in.

One.
I just happened to look out my front window earlier from a funny angle and realised that my Camellia sasanqua ‘Navajo’, which I had thought was doing nothing, had a cluster of flowers out. I should keep a note of when it opens each year, autumn flowering camellias are early this year in some gardens but I don’t think ‘Navajo’ is any earlier than usual.

Two.
Last weekend I put in an item about a delivery I’d just received from Nick Macer at Pan Global Plants. Four of the seven plants in the box were for me, three for someone else. Coniogramme intermedia ‘Yoroi Musha’ is said by Nick, who introduced it to the UK, to be “lusted after by those that have seen it here”. I had seen it already in the garden of the lady who tacked the other three items onto my delivery and, yes, I did lust after it. I now own it and all that remains is to find it a suitable home.

Three.
Also in the box was this beauty, Curculigo crassifolia NJM 10.123. Nick says this was originally introduced from North Vietnam and I assume from the collection number that this is a collection he made himself. I think for the time being I shall keep this in a pot and bring it under protection for winter. It looks like it might be a grass or a palm but it is neither. It won’t grow a trunk and it produces not very showy flowers at ground level.

Four.
We bought a plant of Salvia ‘Purple and Bloom’ from a local nursery in the spring. Stupid name, there is a ‘Black and Bloom’, which at least is a feeble pun, but ‘Purple and Bloom’ is meaningless. I don’t know how it differs from ‘Amistad’, I can’t see a significant or consistent difference at all. Perhaps it’s hardier, the blurb I’ve read about it makes no mention of ‘Amistad’ or how it might be different. I took a picture of both together, ‘Amistad’ on the left. Is ‘Amistad’ slightly bluer? Does ‘Purple and Bloom’ have darker calyces? Maybe.

Five.
Fuchsia gall mite has been on the rampage in our garden this year and my two pronged strategy for controlling it, cutting all plants right down every year and picking it off as soon as I see it, has failed miserably. I don’t see much alternative to giving up on varieties that prove very susceptible, the trouble being that it seems likely to be nearly all of them. I could end up with plenty of places to put Coniogramme ‘Yoroi Musha’. This is Fuchsia magellanica ‘Aurea’, a really good variety that we will be very upset to lose.

Six.
I bought a new Plectranthus a week or so ago, ‘Velvet Elvis’, which should have showy flowers in a few weeks time and get featured here, but as good as some of the flowery ones are, it is the varieties grown for their foliage that really provide value for money. This is a pot of Plectranthus ‘Santana’, three plants in a 15 inch pot in spring, now nearly four feet wide. The variegation is somewhat unstable, I may take some more cuttings from shoots that look “right”.

And that, once again, is that. All being well, I shall see you next week.

38 thoughts on “Six on Saturday – 11/10/2025

  1. Your words that I found amusing were, “…the slow autumnal descent into chaos continues at a very leisurely pace.”

    I found one bit a mite galling — infestation of gall mites. It sounds awful. Good luck!

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    1. It makes sense that Fuchsias would be valuable to insects in that they presumably produce plenty of nectar so are popular with bees and flower for a long time very late in the year. I shall be digging out the worst affected plants this year though, they’re just not worth having.

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  2. I can’t see any difference in the salvias and agree with you on the names. Velvet Elvis is a bit daft too! But Santana looks good. And I am more of a Santana fan than an Elvis! None from my garden this week, but I did get to visit one of your oft visited places. And found some good colours.

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    1. Fuchsias are so useful for having a long flowering season in some of the shadier areas but there are several that I am going to be forced to give up on, just too susceptible to gall mite to be worth bothering with.

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    1. I always get suspicious when I see what appear to be identical plants with different names. Evading paying royalties on a plant with breeders rights by selling it under a different name doesn’t seem right, but then again a lot of breeders rights are held by people who didn’t raise the plant to begin with.

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    1. I will keep on comparing the two Salvias, see if I can see a real difference. I’ll check on the nectar guides. I think Fuchsia gall mite has to be turned into an opportunity to get rid of some plants and replace them with something new; it really looks like a losing battle.

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    1. Curculigo is in the family Hypoxidaceae, order Asparagales, so related to Alliums, Yuccas and various other perennial monocots. I’m not expecting it to get very tall but to hopefully make a bigger clump.

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