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#1
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ID of Acacia
Late last year, Ray planted two Acacias fairly close to the house because we
thought the scent and the yellow of the flowers would look good in that particular spot. To our surprise they flowered this year BUT have only finished about two weeks ago *and* the flowers were a white/pale grey colour. Anyone know which this is or do we just have two anaemic Acacias? -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk (remove weeds from address) |
#2
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ID of Acacia
In message , Sacha
writes Late last year, Ray planted two Acacias fairly close to the house because we thought the scent and the yellow of the flowers would look good in that particular spot. To our surprise they flowered this year BUT have only finished about two weeks ago *and* the flowers were a white/pale grey colour. Anyone know which this is or do we just have two anaemic Acacias? In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. -- Klara, Gatwick basin |
#3
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ID of Acacia
On Jun 30, 7:07 pm, Klara wrote:
In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. No, every aspect of Robinia is significantly different from that of any Acacia at the very first glance. Both Sacha and Ray are very familiar with both genera and could not mistake them. I can't help wondering whether this may be Acacia elata - I should have paid attention a few weeks ago. It is not widely seem in the UK, but does occasionally make an appearance from haphazardly collected seeds. Compared to A. dealbata, the foliage is slightly more lush and glossy green rather than silver grey. It flowers later than dealbata with racemes of creamy white, globose flowers heads (about one third larger than dealbata). It is grown in the eastern Med and to my mind is a very attractive tree. There used to be a very fine example in the front garden of a house up on the hill from here. It started flowering in late March and was still carrying flowers in July. During the long hot summer of 1990 it flowered almost continuously through to October. New owners a few years later replaced it with a mountain ash. Morons! It is less hardy than dealbata and probably only suitable for planting in the southernmost counties. I can't remember there being any significant fragrance, but that does not mean there is none. |
#4
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ID of Acacia
"Klara" wrote in message
news In message , Sacha writes Late last year, Ray planted two Acacias fairly close to the house because we thought the scent and the yellow of the flowers would look good in that particular spot. To our surprise they flowered this year BUT have only finished about two weeks ago *and* the flowers were a white/pale grey colour. Anyone know which this is or do we just have two anaemic Acacias? In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. -- Klara, Gatwick basin This could well be it http://tinyurl.com/2g94ml Regards, Emrys Davies. |
#5
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ID of Acacia
"Dave Poole" wrote in message
oups.com... On Jun 30, 7:07 pm, Klara wrote: In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. No, every aspect of Robinia is significantly different from that of any Acacia at the very first glance. Both Sacha and Ray are very familiar with both genera and could not mistake them. I can't help wondering whether this may be Acacia elata - I should have paid attention a few weeks ago. It is not widely seem in the UK, but does occasionally make an appearance from haphazardly collected seeds. Compared to A. dealbata, the foliage is slightly more lush and glossy green rather than silver grey. It flowers later than dealbata with racemes of creamy white, globose flowers heads (about one third larger than dealbata). It is grown in the eastern Med and to my mind is a very attractive tree. There used to be a very fine example in the front garden of a house up on the hill from here. It started flowering in late March and was still carrying flowers in July. During the long hot summer of 1990 it flowered almost continuously through to October. New owners a few years later replaced it with a mountain ash. Morons! It is less hardy than dealbata and probably only suitable for planting in the southernmost counties. I can't remember there being any significant fragrance, but that does not mean there is none. This could well be it http://tinyurl.com/2g94ml Regards, Emrys Davies. |
#6
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ID of Acacia
"Dave Poole" wrote in message oups.com... On Jun 30, 7:07 pm, Klara wrote: In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. No, every aspect of Robinia is significantly different from that of any Acacia at the very first glance. Both Sacha and Ray are very familiar with both genera and could not mistake them. I can't help wondering whether this may be Acacia elata - I should have paid attention a few weeks ago. It is not widely seem in the UK, but does occasionally make an appearance from haphazardly collected seeds. Compared to A. dealbata, the foliage is slightly more lush and glossy green rather than silver grey. It flowers later than dealbata with racemes of creamy white, globose flowers heads (about one third larger than dealbata). It is grown in the eastern Med and to my mind is a very attractive tree. There used to be a very fine example in the front garden of a house up on the hill from here. It started flowering in late March and was still carrying flowers in July. During the long hot summer of 1990 it flowered almost continuously through to October. New owners a few years later replaced it with a mountain ash. Morons! It is less hardy than dealbata and probably only suitable for planting in the southernmost counties. I can't remember there being any significant fragrance, but that does not mean there is none. Would this be the same one we see flowering under the Eucalypts on Madeira in October? flowers paler than dealbata foliage similar too but not quite the same - been wondering what it is! -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collections of Clematis viticella (cvs) and Lapageria rosea |
#7
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ID of Acacia
On 30/6/07 21:11, in article ,
"Emrys Davies" wrote: "Klara" wrote in message news In message , Sacha writes Late last year, Ray planted two Acacias fairly close to the house because we thought the scent and the yellow of the flowers would look good in that particular spot. To our surprise they flowered this year BUT have only finished about two weeks ago *and* the flowers were a white/pale grey colour. Anyone know which this is or do we just have two anaemic Acacias? In Hungary what is generally known as acacia is in fact robinia pseudoacacia. There is also a variety with pink blossom: Robinia pseudoacacia Casque Rouge. -- Klara, Gatwick basin This could well be it http://tinyurl.com/2g94ml Regards, Emrys Davies. No, none of those. But thank you. Nor is it at all like a Robinia. -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk (remove weeds from address) |
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