Both garden and I wilted on the recent oven-like 42°C
day.
Well, most of the garden. Some plants are extraordinarily
resilient, taking heat & dry soil with aplomb. (Here we have tank water
only...so the garden gets almost zero watering...in a Mediterranean climate.)
Blue salvia (probably Salvia
chamaedryoides `Marine Blue', pictured above), is holding up well, and should
flower right through the warm months (up until late autumn), like the rest of
its tribe. Both the salvia and the nearby Phygelius
are looking at me, saying, superciliously, `What Heat?' - and both attract
myriads of birds seeking nectar. (Phygelius
might be a bit messy to have near the house, but the constant avian
activity that we can see through our windows makes it worth the pain.)
Bloodroot (Sanguinaria
canadensis, above) is surprisingly happy in pots - these are kept watered - and I'm looking at
them afresh. I'm preparing a talk on poppies and, to my surprise, bloodroot is
in the handsome poppy family. Every single species in Papaveraceae seems to have the prettiest of
flowers (and sometimes, as here, wonderful leaves)! Like all the other wealth
of poppies - which grow from the cold Arctic to the heat of South Africa -
bloodroot produces a fluid - latex - which contains alkaloids (interesting ones
in the opium poppy).
Cut a stem and out comes the fluid, orange in this case
but fancifully named as blood-like.
Speaking of poppies, my Papaver `Lauren's Grape' (pictured in my last post) is setting seed and I've carefully cut off
three seeds heads, as they've ripened, with the ring of pores open to release -
it seems - thousands of tiny seeds from the pepper pot-like seed heads. Don't pick them green! - the seeds will not
be ready. I've only had the one variety growing so the next generation may
have, again, that wonderful purple.
True lilies (Lilium, top),
too, are flowering their heads off.
I love it when the garden gives you a truly
wonderful surprise.
Jill Weatherhead is
horticulturist, writer, garden designer and principal at Jill
Weatherhead Garden Design who lives in the Dandenong
Ranges east of Melbourne, and works throughout Victoria.
(www.jillweatherheadgardendesign.com.au)
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