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#1
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Managed to buy one of these plants, Myosotidium hortensia, at yesterdays
Savill Garden Plant Sale and wonder if anyone is growing it and what it's preferences are in the UK. One person has told my warm, well drained and some sun yet another has said where ferns grow well, ie. light shade and always damp but not wet. Looking at the leaves it looks like it might be slug bait, is it? -- Regards Bob Hobden Posting to this Newsgroup from the W.of London. UK |
#2
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"Chris Hogg" wrote ...
"Bob Hobden" wrote: Managed to buy one of these plants, Myosotidium hortensia, at yesterdays Savill Garden Plant Sale and wonder if anyone is growing it and what it's preferences are in the UK. One person has told my warm, well drained and some sun yet another has said where ferns grow well, ie. light shade and always damp but not wet. Looking at the leaves it looks like it might be slug bait, is it? I used to grow them about ten few years ago. Mine had full sun in a south facing corner backed by low stone walls running SE and SW. Bear in mind that Chatham Island is a rather small island some distance off the east coast of New Zealand, exposed to all the salt gales that blow, rather like we are in this garden. It grows naturally on cliffs and above the strand line on beaches, so often soaked in salt spray. Seemed an ideal plant to grow here. I used to give mine a very generous annual top dressing of fresh seaweed from the local beach, complete with salty sand and remains of fishing tackle. They grew well, but tended to get rather woody as they got old, a bit like bergenias. Can't really remember now what happened to them. I think over several years they had fewer and fewer flowers, and eventually I dug them up and composted them. Set seed prolifically, I do remember. Don't recall any trouble with slugs. Plenty of references on Google: http://tinyurl.com/bvzggt6 Thanks Chris, from what I've read it appears it may need to be grown as a pot plant here allowing some winter protection from the freezing temperatures. I would imagine salt spray would not be to the liking of slugs, or indeed, salty seaweed, so that may be why you had no trouble with them. Others seem to say they suffer badly with slug/snail damage. Perhaps I'll just sprinkle a tiny bit of salt around the top of the pot and use seaweed extract as a feed. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#3
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On Sun, 12 May 2013 16:54:03 +0100, "Bob Hobden"
wrote: Managed to buy one of these plants, Myosotidium hortensia, at yesterdays Savill Garden Plant Sale and wonder if anyone is growing it and what it's preferences are in the UK. One person has told my warm, well drained and some sun yet another has said where ferns grow well, ie. light shade and always damp but not wet. Looking at the leaves it looks like it might be slug bait, is it? I had one once, years ago. It did well in a fairly sunny place for one summer but did not come through the winter. Pam in Bristol |
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