Tag Archives: salvias

Verging on the Delightful

Digitalis grandis thrives in shady places

Digitalis grandis thrives in shady places

A shady bank of Chaerophyllum hirsutum

A shady bank of Chaerophyllum hirsutum

The verges were as enticing as the meadows with shady and sunny habitats providing a wonderful diversity of plants.  In the shade, the soft yellow digitalis grandis was just  coming into flower, while carpets of alpine strawberries providing snacking opportunities and pink chaerophyllum hirsutum, so desirable in our gardens, defeated ranker plants to become the feature plant on a shady bank.  It is so exciting to see what we regard as choice plants in their natural habitat.  I found a clematis alpina growing among rocks and nearby a patch of  large-flowered blue aquilegia.  On the sunny side of the street, so to speak, there were campanulas, thymes and salvias all thriving in the free-draining soil.  When we see plants in the wild, it helps us to provide similar conditions in our garden and grow better plants.  Keith Wiley of Wildside Plants is a great proponent of this and  you can read  about his methods in ‘On the Wild Side: Experiments in New Naturalism. Dove Cottage Nursery is an excellent source of plants for naturalistic planting.

So much more peaceful than a strimmer.

So much more peaceful than a strimmer.

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Floral Overload

Campanula-Patula

Campanula Patula

Digitalis grandis thrives in shady places

Digitalis grandis thrives in shady places

Although we travelled near and far during our week in Transylvania and I enjoyed every minute,  I could equally well have spent a deliriously happy week just botanising in the species-rich meadows around the hotel.  Yellow rattle was the  dominant plant in many of the pastures, ensuring the low fertility which allows wild flowers to thrive.  Glossy yellow trollius hovered above fragrant orchids, clovers, campanulas, geraniums, oxeye daisies, Vipers Bugloss, ajugas, scabious, thyme, thistles, hyssop, salvias and dianthus (to name but a few).  This richness is thanks to a combination of terrain (too steep for machinery) and traditional methods (meadows cut by hand and only grazed by sheep, never cattle or horses).

The meadow next to the guesthouse thick with yellow rattle, trollius, clover and fragrant orchids

The meadow next to the guesthouse thick with yellow rattle, trollius, clover and fragrant orchids

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