Flower from Mixed Borders at RHS Wisley. If this plant flowered, then no photos of them were taken during 2013 by H. Kavanagh or Chris Garnons-Williams, where we could identify the plant |
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Plant Name |
Canna warscewiczii |
Common Name |
Indian Shot |
Soil |
Chalk, Loam, Sand, Clay |
Sun Aspect |
Full Sun |
Soil Moisture |
Moist and Well-drained |
Plant Type |
Summer Bedding Plant - Tender Herbaceous Perennial |
Height x Spread in inches (cms) |
36 x 24 (90 x 60) |
Foliage |
Coarse and oval Green leaves with Purple margins and stems |
Flower Shape, Natural Arrangement, Number of Petals and Flower Colour in Month(s). Seed |
Small funnel-shaped, Red flowers in July-October "I have been growing these bold architectural plants for a good 10 years or so, but when I picked Keith Hayward’s brain I learnt some invaluable tips. Keith, with his wife Christine, holds the National Collection, and together they run Hart’s Cannas (see right). The first common error that many people make with cannas is deadheading. You should definitely not deadhead a canna. These beauties will flower profusely from July until the frosts as long as you sit on your secateurs. This is because the new flowering shoot comes up within the dead flower and, a month or so later, will produce more flowers. Some flower stems will produce four lots of flowers – unless, of course, you cut them off. Because cannas look so lush, tropical and exotic, I had assumed they would produce their best given plenty of sun and a good, moisture-holding soil. Not a bit of it. Keith left some cannas in pots in his polytunnel and totally neglected them; the tunnel became so bone dry that even the weeds shrivelled. The cannas, however, survived without so much as a flop. They will grow taller and thicker with high moisture levels, but in drought they do not stop performing. Their bright flower colours look fabulous in full sun, but it’s not actually good for them as it causes the stronger-coloured foliage – often with purple and striped forms – to fade, and the flower colour to lose strength. Cannas perform best in semi or full shade, so use these striking plants to transform darker, drier parts of the garden. As we all have realised this summer, the most useful plants are those able to withstand non-stop rain followed by desert-like dryness. Here another long ball was bowled by Keith. Cannas will grow well in shallow water and swampy ground… he has seen them growing in polluted ditches where they are used to filter out the pollutants. He has grown both Canna 'Lucifer’ and 'Stuttgart’ totally immersed in water and they thrive." from Cannas: hot, tropical and easy to grow by Bunny Guiness writing in The Telegraph in October 2009. |
Bedding Plant Use |
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Comment |
Bushy Form. "The beauty of this plant is that it gives your garden cohesion. Instead of having a number of large tropical foliage plants growing in your garden... you have a number of large tropical foliage plants bursting through a sea of luxuriant foliage. Just saying that sounds better. I like to snake these plants through the garden. They hold everything together. Plants were seed raised in late February and became mature plants in mid July. The flowers are not huge as with the hybrids, but are unaffected by torrential downpours. Water off a ducks back if you like. If you have 20, 30, 50 or more plants then small and subtle is more desirable. Canna Warscewiczii is a species canna and as such is one of the canna varieties easily grown from seed. From your initial purchase, you should be self sufficient in seeds after one season. If you follow the guide lines in Growing canna from seed there is no reason why you can't get close to 100% germination with these plants. Occasionally, one or two seedlings may subsequently fizzle out. These particular plants were probably bindweed in a former life and it is just Gods way of meeting out justice. Of all the canna varieties, Canna Warscewiczii has a reputation of being difficult to overwinter. This gets a sort of 'well yes and no' type of response. Left in the ground with a protective mulch, these plants are reluctant to re-grow. However if the plants are lifted, washed down, then re-potted and placed on a heat mat they will regrow. Despite this I always choose to grow Canna Warscewiczii from seed. There are a number of reasons for this. One reason is that I enjoy it. Another consideration is the available growing space you may have. Lets say you wish to grow 30 plants. Digging up 30 plants, washing and re potting is a considerable work load. Each of these plants will need a 3 litre pot. Each pot will take up valuable greenhouse space. No doubt you will have other plants you also wish to bring into growth on heat mats. Growing from seed helps to free up available space for plants that can't be easily propagated from seed. Growing them from seed, initially uses much less space. They will produce a respectably sized plant by the end of the season. As the plants grow and take up more room you can free up space in the green house by placing other plants outside. The time will come for planting once the danger of frost has passed. Position your plants where you wish them to grow in your garden. Play around with the positioning. Seed grown plants should be planted with a spacing of approximately one foot (30cms) between them. By mid July they will have knitted together hiding bare soil and giving the weeds a hard time. Mix a generous trowelful of home made compost and composted manure into each planting hole. Check each plant for aphids then pop them in the ground. Plant each canna in a slight crater so that water goes where you want it. That's it really, water them well in dry weather. Watch out for slugs and snails during wet weather. When the frosts wipe the foliage out, dig up the plants, squash the rhizomes and into the compost bin they go. " from Cool Tropical Plants. How to grow Canna bulbs provides usefull cultivation details; as does Garden Guide Canna from Van Bourgondien's. Available from Plantify in the UK with Plant Lust and Karchesky Canna in America, Canada and other countries. Horn Canna Farm sells other varieties of canna bulbs in America "Horn Canna Farm, Inc. has been growing and selling cannas since 1928. The Horn family has been at the present location since 1946. We sell the highest quality canna bulbs in the industry. Cannas are an easy to grow, low maintenance flower that offers a beautiful show of color all summer. Enjoy them in your landscape this year! We only sell what we grow, so there are no middleman expenses hidden in our prices. Our bulbs are fresh, large (3-5 eyes), and ready to grow when you receive them. Even with our modern equipment, our bulbs are still hand selected, just like Grandpa Horn did for his daily sales route." Seed available from B&T World Seed in the UK. |
Companions |
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Foliage from Mixed Borders at RHS Wisley. Photo from Chris Garnons-Williams on 3 August 2013. |
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Summer Form from Mixed Borders at RHS Wisley. Photo from Chris Garnons-Williams on 3 August 2013. |
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Location of this plant from Mixed Borders at RHS Wisley on East Border Part 13 from expanded image of Summer Form. Photo from Chris Garnons-Williams on 3 August 2013. |
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Location of this Canna plant whose broad and long green juvenile foliage is in front and to the left of the Aster novae-angliae 'Rubinscatz' (whose black label is top right) from Mixed Borders at RHS Wisley on East Border Part 13 . Photo from Chris Garnons-Williams on 17 June 2013. |
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The Photo of Dahlia 'Teesbrooke's Audrey' from Chris Garnons-Williams on 17 June 2013 included this juvenile Canna with it's easy to read white label!! This part of the photo taken for the larger white labelled plant with white flowers is a small section from its original 4000 x 3000 pixel camera image, which was downloaded from the camera as a JPEG. |
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UK Butterfly:- "OTHER PLANTS ATTRACTIVE TO BUTTERFLIES A garden with butterflies flitting from flower to flower is a delight in itself, but a garden popular with butterflies indicates a healthy environment, the more nectar plants you have, the more butterflies and moths will eventually find you. Butterflies like the warmth and it is important to choose sunny, sheltered spots when planting nectar plants. Plant as many different nectar plants as possible to increase the number of butterfly species visiting your garden. Deadhead the flowers, mulch and water well to keep the plants healthy, prolong flowering and produce more nectar for hungry butterflies. HARDY SHRUBS:
HARDY PERENNIALS:
Common stinging nettles and coarse grasses |
BEDDING PLANT GALLERY PAGES BEDS WITH PICTURES
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BEDDING PLANT GALLERY PAGES which shows the flowers from the plants in the:-
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Bedding Plant Use |
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MIXED BORDERS IN RHS GARDEN AT WISLEY DESIGN GALLERY PAGES FLOWER COLOUR RANGE IN 71 PARTS OF MIXED BORDER DURING |
7 Flower Colours per Month in Colour Wheel below in the MIXED BORDERS DESIGN Gallery, which shows the flowers from:-
Click on Black or White box in Colour of Month. |
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MIXED BORDER BEDDING PLANTS GALLERY PAGES |
Bedding Plants Height from Text Border for the |
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Blue = 0-24 inches |
Green = 24-72 inches |
Red = 72+ inches |
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Bedding Plants Soil Moisture from Text Background |
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Wet Soil |
Moist Soil |
Dry Soil |
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Click on thumbnail to change this Comparison Page to the Plant Description Page of the Bedding Plant named in the Text box below that photo.
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MIXED BORDER BEDDING PLANT INDEX |
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Bedding Plant Name. |
Flower Colour with link to a Design of East Border or |
Flowering Months See Mixed Borders Flower Colour per Month Pages |
Flower Thumbnail |
Height x Spread in inches (cms) |
Bedding Plant Use:- |
Foliage Colour with link to Mixed Borders Foliage Colour Page |
Foliage Thumbnail |
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A |
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Jul-Aug |
Its black label was below the top of the foliage. Flowers not seen before or after 21-08-2013 |
36 x 12 |
Bedding Out, |
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Jul-Oct |
Its white label not replaced with black label. Name on label difficult to read. Flowers not seen before or after 17-06-2013 |
20 x 4 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
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Jul-Sep |
14 x 14 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Bronze and aromatic |
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Lavender-Rose |
Jul-Oct |
24 x 20 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Grey-Green and fragrant |
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Jun-Oct |
18 x 15 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
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Jun-Sep |
12 x 12 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Darkest Bronze- almost Black |
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Jun-Sep |
White label may not have been replaced. Identity of this plant after 17-06-2013 lost by its foliage growing over it. Perhaps its seed was sown on 7 February 2013 |
8 x 12 |
Bedding Out, |
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Apr-Oct |
24 x 24 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Grey-Green leaves dissected into thread-like lobes |
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Light Pink |
Apr-Oct |
20 x 20 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes |
Divided |
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B |
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Jul-First Frost |
7 x 18 |
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Dark Green ferny foliage |
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C |
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Jun-Sep |
64 x 20 |
Bedding Out, Screen-ing, Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Large, Bronze-tinted, bright Green, which is variously striped in green, purple, orange and pink |
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Bright Yellow |
Jul-Oct |
Flowers not seen before or after 10-11-2013 |
Height 80 inches (200 cms) |
Filling In, Screening |
Blue-Green |
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July-First Frost |
Flowers not seen before or after 3-08-2013 |
36 x 24 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Coarse and oval Green leaves with Purple margins and stems |
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Pale Lemon-Yellow |
Jul-Sep |
Flowers not seen before or after 17-06-2013 |
48 x 24 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Finely divided Dark Green |
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Jun-Nov |
36 x 16 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Ferny Mid-Green |
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Ruby-Red |
Jun-Sep |
30 x 16 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Ferny Light Green |
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Velvety-Red |
Jul-Nov |
36 x 24 |
Filling In, |
Finely-cut Dark Green pinnate foliage |
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Cosmos sulphureus (Dwarf Ladybird) |
Scarlet-Red with Tangerine and Yellow |
Jun-Oct |
24-72 x 12 -36 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, |
Dark Green |
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May-First Frost |
30 x 36 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, |
Hairy, ovate, pointed Dark Green |
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D |
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Yellow with Yellow collar |
Jul-Oct |
36 x 20 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Green |
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There are photos and text description on this Dahlia and more than 44 other Dahlias in the Dahlia Gallery of this website. |
Dark Wine-Red |
Jul-Nov |
20 x 48 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Green |
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As the flowers open, the Purple tipped, White petals turn a more uniform shade of Lilac. |
Jun-Oct |
48 x 24 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Green |
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Jul-Oct |
48 x 24 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Bronze-Orange |
Jul-Oct |
36 x 30 (90 x 75) |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Bronze-tinged, slightly Purplish |
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Dahlia pinnata 'Dawn Sky' |
Unable to locate flower colour or mail-order supplier |
Jul-Sep |
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36 x 12 |
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Purplish-Pink peony flower |
May-Oct |
30 x 20 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Bronze |
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Yellow base petals with tips that are Rose-Red |
Jun-First Frost |
56 x 20 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Screen-ing, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Green |
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White with Lilac flush |
Jul-Sep |
48 x 24 |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Screen-ing, |
Dark Green |
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Cadmium Yellow single flower |
Jul-Oct |
27 x 24 (73 x 60) |
Bedding Out, Filling In, |
Toothed, pinnate, dark mahogany to purple-black leaves |
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Straw-Yellow flowers, the broad rays orange-red at the base, and the disk deep purple |
Jun-Oct |
24 x 20 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes |
Bronze |
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Pale Pink with White inner collars around Yellow centres |
Jul-Oct |
48 x 24 |
Filling In, |
Dark Green Swan Island Dahlias has been family owned since 1927 and is the largest dahlia grower in the USA with 40 acres of Dahlias growing 350 varieties, that are open to the public during blooming season. |
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Red flowers tipped with White |
Jul-Oct |
40 x 12 |
Filling In, |
Dark Green |
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White with soft Pink flush flower |
Jul-Sep |
30 x 18 (75 x 45) |
Filling In, |
Purple-black stems and chocolate coloured foliage |
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Dianthus barbatus 'Kaleidoscope' It is likely that this plant's name is Dianthus barbatus 'Kaleidoscope Mixed' |
Pink that gradually mature to White |
May-Sep |
24 x 12 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Dusky Pink |
May-Nov |
36 x 18 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Linear to lance-shaped Mid Green |
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E |
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F |
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G |
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Jun-Aug |
18 x 12 |
Bedding Out, |
Light Green |
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H |
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Heliotropium arborescens 'Marine' |
Violet-Blue |
Jun-Aug |
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12 x 36 |
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Heliotropium arborescens is synonymous with Heliotropium peruvianum, but whether cultivar 'Marine' is the same as 'Dwarf Marine' I would not know since their descriptions are different. The Black Plant Label inserted after the White Plant Label appears to provide the name for a different plant from that named in the White Plant Label, so no Bedding Plant Description Page produced. |
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Heliotropium peruvianum |
Royal Purple |
Jun-Sep |
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18 x 12 |
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I |
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n/a |
n/a |
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24 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Semi-succulent cerise-colored stems and red oblanceolate leaves that are marked with lighter veins |
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J |
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K |
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L |
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Aug-Nov |
48 x 36 (120 x 90) |
Bedding Out, |
Deliciously-scented, spade-like, thick, felted, grey-green leaves |
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M |
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N |
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O |
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Osteospermum 'Sunny Cecil' See other varieties from the Sunny Series |
White daisy-like flower heads with dark Purple centres |
May-Aug |
10 x 10 |
Filling In, |
Toothed, obovate, Mid- to Dark Green |
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P |
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White Unable to locate its flowers from Apr-Nov 2013 |
Apr-Oct Used flowers from an Exhib-ition |
14 x 12 |
Filling In, |
Rose scented, deeply incised, Grey-Green |
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Wine-Red blotched Black |
Jun-Nov |
16 x 12 (40 x 30) |
Bedding Out, |
Brilliant Green |
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Penstemon 'Countess of Dalkeith' also called Penstemon |
Plum-Purple and White-throated funnel-shaped |
Jun-Nov |
30 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Narrow oval Dark Green |
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Penstemon Fujiyama 'Yayama' (Plant Breeders Rights apply = 'Yayama') |
Shell-Pink flowers with broad satiny White throats |
May-Oct |
24 x 18 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs |
Narrow Mid-Green |
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Funnel-shaped Magenta to Cerise flowers with a White throat |
May-Oct |
30 x 18 (75 x 45) |
Bedding Out, |
Fleshy Mid-Green leaves with thick stems. |
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White-throated, Pink flowers |
May-Oct |
40 x 20 |
Bedding Out, |
Mid to Grey-Green |
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Wine-Red coloured flowers and throat streaked with purple |
May-Oct |
28 x 20 (70 x 50) |
Bedding Out, |
Lance shaped Dark Green leaves with tinged red stems |
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Bell-shaped purple/blue flowers with White throat |
May-Oct |
24 x 18 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Mid to Dark Green |
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Penstemon 'Vesuvius Yasius' (Volcano Series) |
Purple funnel-shaped flowers with White throats |
May-Oct |
24 x 14 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Narrow, oval and Mid Green |
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White |
Jul-Oct |
24 x 18 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes |
Dark Green |
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Jul-Aug |
30 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Q |
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R |
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Ricinus communis 'Impala' |
Creamy-White |
August |
The black label for this plant was seen in a photo of Canna 'Ra', but no photo of its foliage or flowers was taken before or after 10 November 2013 |
48 x 48 |
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Copper-Red palmate leaves |
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Jul-Oct |
24 x 16 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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S |
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Blue-tinged bracts with large green calyces See photo of flower from National Trust Hinton Ampner Garden |
Jul-Oct |
80 x 80 (200 x 200) |
Bedding Out, Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Dark Green |
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Jun-Oct |
24 x 24 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Fire Engine Red flowers framed by reddish-black bracts |
Jul-Oct |
24 x 24 |
Filling In, |
Triangular, toothed and Mid-Green |
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White overlaid with Pink |
Jun-Oct |
18 x 16 (45 x 40) |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Scarlet |
Jun-Oct |
18 x 12 (45 x 30) |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Jul-Oct |
24 x 24 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Mid Green |
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Blue flowers with black calyces |
Jul-Oct |
100 x 36 |
Filling In, Screening, Pots and Troughs |
Ovate, wrinkled, pointed, lightly-toothed, Dark Green |
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Deep Pink tubular flowers |
Jul-Nov |
60 x 40 |
Filling In, Screening |
Dark Green |
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Jun-Oct |
60 x 60 (150 x 150) |
Filling In, Screening |
Dark Green |
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(Salvia microphylla 'Hot Lips') |
White flowers with broad lower lips dipped in brilliant Red |
Jul-Oct |
30 x 36 |
Bedding Out, |
Mid-Green |
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Scarlet-Red tubular flowers |
Jun-Dec |
56 x 24 (140 x 60) |
Bedding Out, |
Oval and Light Green |
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Very long, open-mouther, deep Blue |
Jul-Sep |
24 x 12 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Dark Green |
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Soft Lavender-White blossoms with Purplish bracts |
Sep-Nov |
84 x 84 |
Filling In, Screening |
Dark Green |
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Jun-Oct |
18 x 12 |
Filling In, |
Mid Green |
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Creamy yellow flowers, suffused with shades of pink and orange |
Jun-Oct |
30 x 36 (75 x 90) |
Bedding Out, |
Mid Green |
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Jul-Nov |
36 x 36 |
Bedding Out, |
Mid Green |
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May-Sep |
14 x 12 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Serrated Dark Green |
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Purple calyces with extended purple petals |
May-Nov |
48 x 48 |
Bedding Out, |
White-woolly when young, narrow, lance-shaped, grey-green leaves, white beneath |
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Jun-Nov |
20 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Black-currant-scented and Dark Green |
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T |
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Jun-Sep |
24 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Ferny and Dark Green |
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U |
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V |
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Jun-Sep |
12 x 16 |
Bedding Out, |
Feathery and Mid-Green |
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Purple |
Jun-Oct |
12 x 16 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Dark Green |
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Light Violet-Blue |
Jun-Sep |
18 x 24 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Deeply serrated and Mid-Green |
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Red with White Throat |
Jun-Sep |
10 x 16 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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May-Sep |
18 x 20 |
Filling In, Pots and Troughs, Window Boxes, Hanging Baskets |
Ovate and Mid-Green |
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W |
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XYZ |
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White flowers with pinky-rose centre |
Jul-Oct |
18 x 18 |
Bedding Out, |
Dark Green |
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Site design and content copyright ©January 2014. Camera Photos of plant Supports added June 2019. Chris Garnons-Williams. DISCLAIMER: Links to external sites are provided as a courtesy to visitors. Ivydene Horticultural Services are not responsible for the content and/or quality of external web sites linked from this site. |
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The Azalea Society of America provides 4 fans of RHS, UCL and RGB Colors:-
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Maybe this will explain how my small hosta - growing in the shade and I have done nothing for it - has survived slugs and snails for more than 25 years. It now produces new shoots, flowers with no leaf damage before the end of the season when it allows the caterpillars to eat it up and then it retires underground for the winter. Many years ago , I bought a small Blue Juniper tree, removed it from its container and planted it. 10 years later it died. When I removed it from the ground, I found that the roots, which had spiralled in the original container and then never unwound themselves. They had thickened until they occupied all the space between themselves, and very little new root had gone away from this original rootball. Thus the tree had insufficient roots to take up sufficient water and had then died. That problem will not occur with the plants grown in those 'Light pots', since they will continue to grow downwards and away from the rootball after they have been planted, especially if you spread the roots out when you plant the tree onto a cone of earth. |
Copied from Ivydene Gardens Mixed Borders in RHS Garden at Wisley Garden Design: |
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This section details what I consider as errors in design carried out by the staff at the RHS garden in Wisley:-
Mixing all the primary colours together for the flower colours used in many of the 71 parts of these Mixed Borders This mixture provides a foliage and flower foil against which these other permanent herbaceous perennials can provide new growth from the ground each year, with the different colours of foliage from juvenile to mature to dying off in the autumn and then an easy maintenance during the months of December-March for removing most of the growth above ground and replacing the plant supports to provide a neat bed in a series of large ground areas. The bedding plants - see Bedding Annual Plant Index and Un-labelled Bedding Annual Plant Index pages - provide the icing on the cake at different flowering time periods between May and November to enhance the overall flower colour scheme. The new bedding each year can provide opportunities to vary the look of these beds. It was disapointing that I did not see the flowers during 2013 of more than 25% of these Permanent Herbaceous Perennial Plants - possible reasons shown in Lost Flowers Page with 'Walkabout' Plants and 'Stateless' Plants Page. A table for each month - May, June, July, August, September, October, November - shows the flower photos for each of the 71 parts of the Mixed Borders split into Blue, Orange, Pink, Red, Unusual Colour, White, or Yellow for all the plants. Besides that, you can see from the table below that Red and Pink with Unusual Flower Colours seem to be predominant as flower colours and that these are spread throughout the beds.
I have added the BEDding (started January 2014 - completed March 2014) and then the OTHer Permanent Plants (started March 2014 - completed May 2014) to the table below to show the flower colour planting scheme of the Bedding and the Other Permanent Plants and then its combination.
If I had produced this planting design with its mixture of flower colours in almost every part - or maintained these beds in this way - in 2013, I would be deeply ashamed. As a nation of gardeners in Britain; the Royal Horticultural Society being at its pinnacle, with the tradition of excellence by our previous head gardeners and their staff during the Victorian era, I had thought that the staff at the RHS Garden at Wisley would not need a lecture.
Another Possible Solution for lack of coordinated Flower Colour Scheme If you want the garden to be restful to the eye, then you can provide a colour scheme using the harmony of adjacent colours. If you prefer to shock the visitor, then use the contrast of opposite colours, but I am not favourable of the above partial use of the harmony of triads as shown by the Colour Wheel Page of Garden Design.
Very Poor Plant Labelling After reviewing the situation that 102 plants were missing their identity when in flower in 2013 out of 348 (29.31% of the plants) in 768 square metres of Mixed Borders garden beds:-
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