Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Comfrey ID
I came across, growing by a canal, a comfrey which was lower growing,
and with different coloured flowers, from the usual Symphytum x uplandicum (Russian Comfrey). At the time I thought it was Symphytum tuberosum (tuberous comfrey), but on checking my books it seems a less that exact match. http://www.stewart.hinsley.me.uk/Images/Symph24.jpg http://www.stewart.hinsley.me.uk/Images/Symph24.jpg Any opinions? -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Comfrey ID
I don't know whether this is of any help, but a similar plant used to
grow in the hedgerows and ditches in the Midlands. I had it as Symphytum orientale - less coarse than the more common comfreys and is (or at least was) quite widespread although I've not seen it down here in the SW, so my memory of it is a bit vague. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Comfrey ID
In message
, Dave Poole writes I don't know whether this is of any help, but a similar plant used to grow in the hedgerows and ditches in the Midlands. I had it as Symphytum orientale - less coarse than the more common comfreys and is (or at least was) quite widespread although I've not seen it down here in the SW, so my memory of it is a bit vague. I don't know Symphytum orientale, which appears to have its headquarters in East Anglia and the South East, but which also occurs in the Gloucestershire, Somerset, Dorset area. It was the red immature flowers that had caused me to eliminate that, but Stace tells me that S. orientale has a shallowly lobed calyx, and the plant I photographed has a very deeply lobed calyx, which seems to be sufficient to reject S. orientale as an identification. I'm now leaning to Symphytum grandiflorum, which isn't illustrated in my books. To add to the confusion, I have photographs recorded as S. grandiflorum from Ness Botanic Gardens from 2004 and 2005. It would appear that these are different plants, and the latter is quite possibly S. officinale. It appears that I'd assumed that I'd photographed the same plant in successive years when I hadn't. Neither is common round here, but according to the BSBI, S. grandiflorum is the most recorded after S. x uplandicum and S. officinale. -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Comfrey | Australia | |||
Getting rid of comfrey | Australia | |||
Comfrey as prophylactic? ;-) | United Kingdom | |||
Something growing in my comfrey liquid !!! | United Kingdom | |||
Comfrey as a Green Fertilizer? | United Kingdom |