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#1
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Huge mullein
I'm familiar with the usual wild mulleins, with the single spike of
flowers, but never seen one like this before. It's about 2.5 meters tall and growing 'wild' on a bank where I work. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/james.ford60/mullein.jpg Identification anyone, please? Jim |
#2
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Huge mullein
Jim Ford writes
I'm familiar with the usual wild mulleins, with the single spike of flowers, but never seen one like this before. It's about 2.5 meters tall and growing 'wild' on a bank where I work. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/james.ford60/mullein.jpg Identification anyone, please? You could try Hoary mullein, V pulverulentum. It's branched and quite big. According to Fitter, only in E Anglia, though I was at a nature reserve in Derbys at yesterday and I'm sure the warden claimed that the large branched mulleins on the steep sides of the valley were hoary mullein. -- Kay |
#3
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Huge mullein
In article , K writes: | Jim Ford writes | I'm familiar with the usual wild mulleins, with the single spike of | flowers, but never seen one like this before. It's about 2.5 meters tall | and growing 'wild' on a bank where I work. | | http://homepage.ntlworld.com/james.ford60/mullein.jpg | | Identification anyone, please? | | You could try Hoary mullein, V pulverulentum. It's branched and quite | big. According to Fitter, only in E Anglia, though I was at a nature | reserve in Derbys at yesterday and I'm sure the warden claimed that the | large branched mulleins on the steep sides of the valley were hoary | mullein. The pictures certainly match. But it is the sort of plant that is likely to be an escape from wild garden schemes. Clapham, Tutin and Warburg says that it is a rare casual, and that V. speciosum is introduced and similar and sometimes naturalises itself. http://www.plantpress.com/wildlife/o...arymullein.php http://www.hlasek.com/verbascum_speciosum_685.html Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#4
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Huge mullein
In message , Nick Maclaren
writes In article , K writes: | Jim Ford writes | I'm familiar with the usual wild mulleins, with the single spike of | flowers, but never seen one like this before. It's about 2.5 meters tall | and growing 'wild' on a bank where I work. | | http://homepage.ntlworld.com/james.ford60/mullein.jpg | | Identification anyone, please? | | You could try Hoary mullein, V pulverulentum. It's branched and quite | big. According to Fitter, only in E Anglia, though I was at a nature | reserve in Derbys at yesterday and I'm sure the warden claimed that the | large branched mulleins on the steep sides of the valley were hoary | mullein. The pictures certainly match. But it is the sort of plant that is likely to be an escape from wild garden schemes. Clapham, Tutin and Warburg says that it is a rare casual, and that V. speciosum is introduced and similar and sometimes naturalises itself. http://www.plantpress.com/wildlife/o...arymullein.php http://www.hlasek.com/verbascum_speciosum_685.html Regards, Nick Maclaren. I haven't looked at any pictures, but Stace also mentions V. pyramidatum (casual in S. England), V. chaixii (casual in S. Britain) and V. speciosum (casual in Kent and East Anglia) and V. lychnitis as having well branched inflorescences. V. lychnitis has yellow flowers around Minehead, and casually elsewhere. -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
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