Was there ever an Easter like this Easter? One when the sun shone unremittingly throughout
the whole weekend? Although we are all
hoping the drought will break soon, for a variety of reasons, most of us were secretly
happy that it did not happen through the
long weekend.
The Head Gardener and I managed to a little time away to
catch up with family, and spent some time on family history matters, but there
was still a spare hour or three in the garden, with some lawn mowing and garden
tidying carried out.
I loved working among some of my favourite plants that
flower at this time of the year, but they are almost all plants the Head Gardener
has no time for – at all.
Take the wonderful paintbrush lily that is flowering its
head off in a large container on the patio.
This was originally a gift from a gardening friend about twenty years ago,
but it has still to arouse the enthusiasm of the Head Gardener. It is one of the many South African members
of the Amaryllis family, and like many of its relatives it flowers on naked
stems before there is any sign of leaves.
But unlike its kin the naked ladies and the wonderful Crinum, this one
has a short stem, about 15 cm long, and relatively squat flowers, with small
petals.
The species in flower at the moment is Haemanthus coccineus, probably the most common of these plants in
New Zealand gardens, although none are really found that often. It is totally summer deciduous (a pointer to
its coming from winter rainfall areas of southern Africa) and the first signs
of life in the autumn is a colouring at the lips of the large bulbs, which sit slightly
above the surface of the soil. These orange-scarlet
buds slowly creep upwards, until they are about 15 cm high, when the tightly
sealed lips of the lower open to reveal an astonishing ball of golden anthers,
looking for all the world like a big red shaving brush.
The Head Gardener is even less impressed with the white
species H. albiflos, which flowers
later in the year, but I would not be without these charming and slightly
oddball South African bulbs.
And I would not be without a toad lily or two either,
although again, the Head Gardener is less than impressed with them too.
These are Tricyrtis
species, members of the Lily family, generally from Eastern Asia, and they are
perennial plants that grow naturally in the moist soil on the edge of forests,
so they are ideally suited to semi-shaded places in our gardens. I guess that it because they live in damp
places they are called toad lilies - I cannot think of any other reason. The flowers are certainly not toad-like, but
rather like refined orchid flowers, usually with curious markings on the
petals.
They flower at this time of the year when the garden can be
a little barren of colour, and even though they are not extremely showy they
are attractive perennials. They are at
their best in the same sort of conditions that hostas, hellebores and other
moisture and shade loving plants thrive in.
I grow a couple of different forms but T. hirta, one of the best, is
probably the most commonly found species in New Zealand. It has white flowers generously splashed with
purple. The leaves in this species are
also attractive – clean, mid-green with ribs reminiscent of hosta leaves.
2 comments:
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Bloomin' good indeed :)
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