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Some plant id's please
A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help??
Plant 1 http://s592.photobucket.com/albums/t...=DSC_3744s.jpg Plant 2 http://s592.photobucket.com/albums/t...=DSC_3748s.jpg Plant 3 http://s592.photobucket.com/albums/t...=DSC_3749s.jpg Plant 4 http://s592.photobucket.com/albums/t...=DSC_3750s.jpg Weed or plant to keep? Many thanks and I look forward to some replies Rick |
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Hope this helps. |
#3
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Some plant id's please
In message , rikwatson
writes A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? The pictures are a little small for ease of identification. Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Something in Boraginaceae. I think it's Alkanet. Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e Looks like a lilac. Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Pass. Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz I think that that's a Geum (Avens). Weed or plant to keep? Depends on whether it is the wild form or one of the cultivars, and in the former case whether you like the wild form. I was at a plant fair today, and among the many Geums was one of the two native wild species. Many thanks and I look forward to some replies Rick -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#4
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Some plant id's please
"rikwatson" wrote in message ... A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Weed or plant to keep? Plant 3 has leaves like a violet. Some of my violets have very large leaves like this. someone |
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Some plant id's please
On 2009-05-03 18:26:19 +0100, rikwatson
said: A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Brunnera macrophylla, perhaps Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e Syringa (lilac) Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Violets Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Weed or plant to keep? Many thanks and I look forward to some replies Rick -- -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Exotic plants, shrubs & perennials South Devon |
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[quote='Sacha[_4_];842606']On 2009-05-03 18:26:19 +0100, rikwatson
said: A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Brunnera macrophylla, perhaps Definitely Alkanet [not mertensia]. A native Anchusa, vigorous and invasive. Lovely blue flowers in spring, but unless you are a herbalist not much use thereafter. Rick Correction to my previous identification [sorry] |
#7
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Some plant id's please
rikwatson writes
A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Green alkanet, a member of the forget-me-not family (Boraginaceae). I think it's a garden plants rather than a UK native, but it is quite vigorous so you may or may not decide to keep it. Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e That looks like a lilac, both in flower form and leaf shape. Is it scented? Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Violet, probably Dog Violet. They've finished flowering for this year, but you may find small triangular-ish seed pods hidden among the foliage. Desirable plant for early spring colour but spread vigorously. I leave all mine and just dig them out of the paths or when I've got something better to plant - I cleared about 2 sq metres of them yesterday. Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz The leaf you are holding is most likely a UK native - Geum urbanum (can never remember its common name). Small yellow flowers, readily seeds itself around and quite invasive. Very difficult to keep just one plant! But you could wait until it flowers to check that it's not a) the other UK native Geum rivale, with larger drooping apricot flowers, which normally grows in damper areas where it can be quite invasive, although it is very pretty b) one of the garden Geums which can have single or double flowers in shades from yellow through apricot to orange. Weed or plant to keep? -- Kay |
#8
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Some plant id's please
rikwatson schrieb:
Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Omphalodes verna Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e Syringa spec. Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Viola spec. ??? Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Campanula spec. ??? -- ************ das GIFTPFLANZEN.COMpendium ************ !!!!!!! jetzt über 800 Pflanzenportraits !!!!!!! ----------- http://www.giftpflanzen.com ----------- |
#9
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Some plant id's please
"rikwatson" wrote in message ... A newbie to this gardening thing, I'm learning quickly but am struggling to id a few plants in our new house's garden. Any help?? Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Plant 2 http://tinyurl.com/cofz4e Plant 3 http://tinyurl.com/dg7hp9 Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Weed or plant to keep? Many thanks and I look forward to some replies Rick -- rikwatson 1. Alkanet 2. Lilac 3. Unsure .. poss. viola (leaf enlarged by shade) 4. Geum, prob. G. urbium aka Wood Avens. It's a weed to me .. I dig it up on sight. Wait for flower (tiny, yellow 4 or 5 petalled); if it is, I'd get rid of it. However, there are many garden-worthy species and cultivars, so it's worth waiting to see the flower. Spider |
#10
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Some plant id's please
Benno Bös writes
rikwatson schrieb: Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Omphalodes verna Could be, but it looks exactly like Green Alkanet, Pentaglottis sempervirens. What are the distinguishing features between these two? Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Campanula spec. ??? Are you looking at the blue flower (which looks like a (probably spanish) bluebell)? - I think the id requested was for the leaf that is being held between finger and thumb -- Kay |
#11
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Some plant id's please
In message , K
writes Benno Bös writes rikwatson schrieb: Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Omphalodes verna Could be, but it looks exactly like Green Alkanet, Pentaglottis sempervirens. What are the distinguishing features between these two? Fide Stace, Omphalodes verna is rhizomatous and stoloniferous, and Pentaglottis sempervirens isn't. Other distinguishing features are corolla size (O. verna is larger) and height (P. sempervirens grows considerably taller). It's (non-variegated forms of) Brunnera macrophylla (also mentioned in the thread) that I would expect to find confused with P. sempervirens. Plant 4 http://tinyurl.com/csx8lz Campanula spec. ??? Are you looking at the blue flower (which looks like a (probably spanish) bluebell)? - I think the id requested was for the leaf that is being held between finger and thumb -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#12
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Some plant id's please
Stewart Robert Hinsley writes
In message , K writes Benno Bös writes rikwatson schrieb: Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Omphalodes verna Could be, but it looks exactly like Green Alkanet, Pentaglottis sempervirens. What are the distinguishing features between these two? Fide Stace, Omphalodes verna is rhizomatous and stoloniferous, and Pentaglottis sempervirens isn't. Thanks :-) Well, we can't tell those from the pic. Other distinguishing features are corolla size (O. verna is larger) Flowers look the right size (compared with leaves) for P sempervirens. I have the impression that not only are O verna flowers larger, they also look larger compared to its leaves. and height (P. sempervirens grows considerably taller). It's (non-variegated forms of) Brunnera macrophylla (also mentioned in the thread) that I would expect to find confused with P. sempervirens. What's the differences between B macrophylla and P sempervirens? - the ones that we'd see in the pic? Or is the answer 'not much that you could tell from the pic' because your original answer IIRC was on the lines of "Boraginaceae, can't tell which one, but possibly alkanet" -- Kay |
#13
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Some plant id's please
In message , K
writes Stewart Robert Hinsley writes In message , K writes Benno Bös writes rikwatson schrieb: Plant 1 http://tinyurl.com/c389xn Omphalodes verna Could be, but it looks exactly like Green Alkanet, Pentaglottis sempervirens. What are the distinguishing features between these two? Fide Stace, Omphalodes verna is rhizomatous and stoloniferous, and Pentaglottis sempervirens isn't. Thanks :-) Well, we can't tell those from the pic. Other distinguishing features are corolla size (O. verna is larger) Flowers look the right size (compared with leaves) for P sempervirens. I have the impression that not only are O verna flowers larger, they also look larger compared to its leaves. and height (P. sempervirens grows considerably taller). It's (non-variegated forms of) Brunnera macrophylla (also mentioned in the thread) that I would expect to find confused with P. sempervirens. What's the differences between B macrophylla and P sempervirens? - the ones that we'd see in the pic? Or is the answer 'not much that you could tell from the pic' because your original answer IIRC was on the lines of "Boraginaceae, can't tell which one, but possibly alkanet" Brunnera has cordate leaves; Pentaglottis has leaves abruptly contracted at the base. (Anchusa has narrower leaves.) -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#14
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Some plant id's please
Stewart Robert Hinsley writes
What's the differences between B macrophylla and P sempervirens? - the ones that we'd see in the pic? Or is the answer 'not much that you could tell from the pic' because your original answer IIRC was on the lines of "Boraginaceae, can't tell which one, but possibly alkanet" Brunnera has cordate leaves; Cordate?? Is that when they're sort of heart-shaped at the base? Pentaglottis has leaves abruptly contracted at the base. (Anchusa has narrower leaves.) Thanks :-) -- Kay |
#15
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Some plant id's please
In message , K
writes Stewart Robert Hinsley writes What's the differences between B macrophylla and P sempervirens? - the ones that we'd see in the pic? Or is the answer 'not much that you could tell from the pic' because your original answer IIRC was on the lines of "Boraginaceae, can't tell which one, but possibly alkanet" Brunnera has cordate leaves; Cordate?? Is that when they're sort of heart-shaped at the base? Yes. Popular books often translate cordate as heart-shaped (in the iconic, rather than real, sense), but botanical usage has converged on using cordate as a term for the shape of the base of the leaf-blade, where the body of the blade projects behind the insertion of the petiole. Pentaglottis has leaves abruptly contracted at the base. (Anchusa has narrower leaves.) Thanks :-) -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
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