Spring is in full swing now: Trillium in pinks and
purples, Mexican orange blossom is laden with perfumed white flowers, and
there's plenty of Spanish bluebells for picking with a very young great nephew
(`Let's pick a bunch for Mama'. The
watering can was very popular too).
The wattles seem to be more floriferous this spring -
from the early ones in winter to the Prickly Moses (Acacia verticillata, above) flowering now. J thinks there's just more
wattle shrubs than there used to be, but my friend K (a wonderful gardener)
agrees with me: there's more flowers on each shrub than usual. Drive along
Wellington Rd, east from the gymkhana near us, and the blooms have been a
knock-out.
(Can I share a wee bug bear? We all know that a little
knowledge can be a bad thing. And while it was great to have (as I often do)
landscape design clients who didn't want environmental weeds in their garden,
never-the-less, blackwood wattles (Acacia
melanoxylon) would have been perfect at the foot of their steep slope (for screening,
indigenous plant, and fire-retardant to boot) but the client thought that I was
recommending black wattles (a different species (A. mearsii) - an environmental weed in my part of the world). He
simply couldn't believe it was a different plant entirely, or accept that I
might know a bit more than him. It was rather frustrating!)
In the bushland that surrounds our garden, along the
drive, we have a little copse of self-sown Prickly Moses. I was thrilled to
find that one shrub has deeper yellow flowers than the others (above). Are the flowers
bigger too? - I think so. A tiny piece of my horticulture course from years
back surfaces in the brain: that plants can - and wattles were particularly
cited - have tetraploid forms, and these plants can have deeper coloured
flowers and larger plant parts. Only one extra chromosome can blight an animal
(or human, of course) but double the chromosomes in each cell of a plant and
boy, can the result be spectacular.
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