Showing posts with label Plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plants. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Spring!

"Now the warm sun of spring melts the frost all around..."
(From 'the table that ran away to the woods' by Stefan Themerson)


 At least that was the story last week; this week I'm feezing my bits and bobs off and it's snowing again(!)
 Still, there are things happening in the garden: here are some of the photos I've been taking over the last fortnight:


Top row l-r:
Snakes Head Fritillary, Tulip 'Doberman'(?), Senecio Rowleyanus (on my windowsill)
Second row l-r:
Victoria plum blossom, Viburnum, Climbing rose
Bottom row l-r:
Euphorbia Characias, Forsythia, Maple (maybe Acer Pseudoplatanus?)

Thursday, 3 December 2015

Plant Sentience and Stevie Wonder: The secret life of plants (1979)

With a experimental-funk Stevie Wonder soundtrack, this documentary is based on the 1973 book of the same name. 'The Secret life of Plants' explores way-out concepts and entertaining pseudo-science such as plant sentience (plants can feel, man!) orgone accumulation (plants can focus energy, man!) and plant emotions. Yes, plant emotions. Great timelapse photography and the film's interesting alternative take on our green leafy friends make this worth a watch.





Was Roald Dahl onto something when he wrote 'The Sound Machine'?

His 1949 tale of a man who invents a machine that can hear roses shreiking as they're cut and trees groaning as they're felled?

Sunday, 29 March 2015

Tuesday, 3 February 2015

propagation tales: the strange story of the cavendish banana.

Vegetative propagation. Along with sowing seeds, one of the cornerstones of gardening. When you propagate a plant in this way, you take a cutting or part of the parent plant and grow it on. These plants are genetically identical to their parents, rather than a plant grown from seed, which combines the genes of both it's parents into it's own genetic code.

Remember a few years ago, when a fungus started attacking the worlds banana plantations and we envisioned a future without bananas as we know them? (more info here ...)

This turn of events takes us on a strange journey back in time, back to the year 1834, to an unexpected place, the greenhouse at Chatsworth House.... Derbyshire.
     a modern banana plantation.

Derbyshire is not normally a place you'd associate with banana farming, yet one hundred and eighty years ago it was the place that spread the Cavendish banana, familiar from supermarkets all over the western world, to the far corners of the tropics. This mass monoculture (when a crop of just one kind is grown in huge swathes) is what has caused this impending banana crisis of doom.

Imagine, if you will, a world where to get a banana, a huge sea voyage, lasting months if not years, had to be undertaken. In Britain, bananas were a delicacy so scarce, so difficult to get hold of, only a handful of people had ever tried one.

At the same time, the stately homes of Britain strived to outdo each other with fabulous gardens, flourishing kitchen gardens and elaborate greehouses, growing tropical oddities and luscious fruits of all kinds. Employing teams of gardeners, they filled their greenhouses with exotic plants, hunted from all corners of the empire and beyond. And the head gardener at Chatsworth, Joseph Paxton, had managed to get hold of a banana plant, smuggled back from China. He dutifully propagated it and in 1839 sent a case of baby plants to Samoa with a missionary, John Williams.
The great glasshouse at Chatsworth, Derbyshire, sadly since destroyed.

The poor little banana plants sat in their heavily shuttered wooden wardian case, withstanding lashings of salt spray (very poisonous to most plants) and starved of light, in fact only one of the plants survived the journey.
the last known original wardian case from the 1830s 

 It was planted when John Williams arrived, and did significantly better than him, as he was killed and eaten by the locals. This banana plant thrived and was the grandaddy of the bananas plants that flourish across the south pacific today.
 Cuttings from the Derbyshire plant ended up getting sent across the world, and today every standard supermarket banana is genetically identical to that original plant. That is why disease is such a problem for the Cavendish banana plantations; no genetic variation means no variation in disease resistance so one fungus can take hold and wipe out the whole lot.

Could it be curtains for the banana as we know it? The one that was included in the last meal of the King of Rock n Roll, Elvis Presley?

Who knows, but luckily there's a host of non-cavendish varieties that we could be growing, so bananas will be on the menu for a while yet.




Winter smells

The flowers of most of these amazingly, deliciously smelly shrubs look rather insignificant, but in deepest winter they'll waft their fantastic scents around your garden and make you want to rush outdoors and sniff sniff sniff.

Daphne 'Jaqueline Postill'


Winter Honeysuckle (Lonicera Fragrantissima)



Witch hazel (Hamamelis Mollis)



















(photo from my mum and dads garden last week)


Viburnum Bodnantense 'Dawn'





















Christmas Box (Sarcococca Confusa)

Unless you have the new scratch and sniff app for your iphone I'm afraid you'll have to track down the actual plants to smell what I'm talking about.

Friday, 17 October 2014

Psychedelic Vegetables

Some psychedelic vegetables to perk up a drab autumn day:
romanesco cauliflower
chioggia beetroot,
red cabbage,
borlotti beans,
rainbow chard,
and of course, 'purple haze' carrots.


You can grow all of these veggies right here in the UK

Sunday, 5 October 2014

Plant love...the Katsura tree and more smells.

What's the best smell in the whole wide world?...
Go to Westonbirt Arboretum at this time of year and find this shrub:

It's the Katsura tree (Cercicdiphyllum Japonicum). The smell of toffee apples and candyfloss as you get near it just knocks your socks off. The amazing smell might be something to do with this bush loitering nearby too...
Chinese Spice bush (lindera glauca)
Actually, loads of the trees at Westonbirt smell great. And I haven't even mentioned the autumn colours. Hooray for Westonbirt!

Monday, 29 September 2014

Plant Love: Some Sensational September Smells.

Favorite smells from my garden this month...
Pictured top to bottom:
Rose geranium
Lemon Verbena; smells like lemon sherbert
Corsican mint
Heliotrope; smells like cherry pie.
Sniff them out!


Sunday, 28 September 2014

Karl Blossfeldt's sculptural plant portraits





Beautiful early 20th century photographic portraits by German teacher Karl Blossfeldt.

Yesterday in the garden








Top to bottom:
Iceland poppy (Papaver Nudicale)
Cyclamen seedlings
Regal Pelargonium 'Lord Bute'
Iris Ensata
Boy & pumpkin
Carex 'frosted curls'
Pilotus & watering can.


The view from the back door: Choisya, Cotoneaster, summer flowering Jasmine, yellow roses, Iris Ensata, Sedums, Cyclamen, alpine Viola, Succulents and Iceland Poppies in pots.

Behind the Choisya: Flowering Rush, ferns, Weigela, Primula Denticulata (drumstick primulas), Black Zantedeschia & Corsican Mint. Salvaged chunky terracotta quarry tiles are in the foreground, a contorted hazel that has just been planted should grow across to break up that big expanse of bricks in the next few years.

Thursday, 25 September 2014

A visit to my M&D's garden






and a new instagram account: search for you_dig_gardens

Top to bottom:
Plume poppies
Contorted Hazel
Japanese Horsetail & Hydrangea 'Blue Wave'
Echinacea 'White Swan' & ophiopogon
Colchicum a.k.a. naked ladies.

All photos taken be me in Lincolnshire on Tuesday.