Friday, June 1, 2012

A Garden full of Flowers



Eschscholzia californica

Eschscholzia californica seedpod












We arrived back from our May trip to the UK to a garden full of beautiful flowers.  Many of the roses were flowering, the herbaceous peony and the ‘stock’ of the tree peony, iris and the first of the Eschscholzia californica (that name makes me feel uncomfortable) – California Poppy - which I’d never managed to grow well in Sussex not even as an annual.  Here many are perennial and take care of themselves, seeding freely from their long bean-like pods, which once ripe (a light beige colour) twist and snap open spraying their tightly packed tiny black seeds.  The majority of the flowers are a deep rich orange, a few are a paler shade with a deep orange centre, even less of them are creamy white and last year we had a couple of a light maroon which I loved.

The clusters of tight red buds nestled like rubies against the yellow leaves of Spiraea japonica either ‘Golden Princess’ or ‘Goldflame’.  Unfortunately many of the shrubs in the nursery in our village are not labelled fully.  I grew ‘Goldflame’ in Sussex and I would say that the leaves are more golden but as the conditions are so different I’ll say no more.  It’s lovely especially in the bud stage.  Spires of Linaria purpurea ‘Canon Went’ have survived several years beneath the canopy of the Liquidambar; this year joined by a white seedling.



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