mardi 17 juin 2008

Chenopodium foliosum

Chenopodium foliosum

Description

Highly novel, easy to grow plant, ideal for the border or patio containers. Base branching with spiky foliage and stems which bear many edible, bright-red strawberry-like fruits through to early autumn.

Sowing Instructions

Sow from February to April indoors at 21-24C (70-75F) in good seed sowing mix. Just cover the seed with sowing mix and keep the it damp but not wet. Germination usually takes 5-14 days.

They can also be sown outdoors where they are to flower during May once the soil has warmed. Keep moist until after germination and thin out to 30cm (12in) apart.

Growing Instructions

When seedlings are large enough to handle, transplant and grow in cooler conditions. Gradually acclimatize to outdoor conditions for 10-15 days before planting out after all risk of frost, 45cm (18in) apart in a sunny spot.



Kingdom Plantae – Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta – Vascular plants
Superdivision Spermatophyta – Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Subclass Caryophyllidae
Order Caryophyllales
Family Chenopodiaceae – Goosefoot family
Genus Chenopodium L. – goosefoot
Species Chenopodium foliosum (Moench) Asch. – leafy goosefoot

Chamaecytisus hirsutus

Chamaecytisus hirsutus

Soin Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.)
Le Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Link a un développement bien droit, avec le temps, elle devient un arbre. Le Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Link est de taille grand , et peut atteindre les 17 m de hauteur;en automne assume une coloration jaune . Ces plantes ne pas toujours vertes, donc perdent les feuilles durant certains mois de l'annèe. Ces plantes ont un développement érigé; an bas elles montrent généralement un tronc dépourvu, tandis-que en haut elles s'élargissent en formant la chevelure.

Températures Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Sole pieno
Plante qui a besoin au moins de quelques heures par jour d'irradiation solaire. On conseille de cultiver Le Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Link à l'extèrieur durant toute l'annèe, vu qu'elles ne craingnent pas le froid.Dans un climat particulièrement venteux nous conseillons d'assurer les jeunes arbres à des longs tuteurs solides, de façon d'éviter que le vent puisse déchausser les jeunes racines peu développées; il peut arriver que les exemplaires de peu d'années craignent le froid intense et le vent.

Irrigation Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Tenere asciutto
Les arrosages sont pratiqués uniquement lorsque le terrain est bien sec depuis plusieurs jours, habituellement chaque 4-5 semaines peut être suffisant; si le climat serait particulièrement chaud il est possible d'intensifier légèrement les arrosages,en utilisant 1-2 sècs d'eau . Nous conseillons d'arroser uniquement les exemplaires jeunes, ou qui viennet d'être mis en demeure; les exemplaires adultes se contentent généralement des pluies.

Parasites Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.)
L'engraissage des arbres se pratique au début du printemps ou en automne, en utilisant de l'humus ou du fumier mûr; on intervient en mélangeant deux seaux de fertilisant au terrain, auprès du tronc de l'arbre chaque 2-3 ans ou au moment de l'implantation.

Adversité Chamaecytisus hirsutus
Généralement dans cette période de l'année nous conseillons un traitement préventif avec un insecticide à ample action,et avec un fongicide systémique, de façon à prévenir l'attaque de la part des aphides et le développement de maladies de champignons.

Substrat Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.)
Cultiver ces plantes dans un terrain souple et profond, très bien drainé.





Kingdom Plantae – Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta – Vascular plants
Superdivision Spermatophyta – Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Subclass Rosidae
Order Fabales
Family Fabaceae – Pea family
Genus Chamaecytisus Link – chamaecytisus
Species Chamaecytisus hirsutus (L.) Link

Cerinthe

Cerinthe Minor

Artful gardeners are always on the lookout for wonderful new plants to enliven beds and borders. Indoors or out, arranging colorful combinations is greatly simplified when we use quantities of long bloomers, plants whose good looks hold for months on end. A recent returnee to the garden scene, Cerinthe major 'Purpurascens', is exactly the sort of tireless worker we need. Commonly called honeywort, this borage relative offers handsome foliage and stunningly colorful bracts that long outlast its small flowers.

Like its kitchen cousin, honeywort's flowers are tubular bells of intense blue or purple, delicately scalloped and lined in cream. The bells are clustered in twos and threes, each group nesting inside brilliantly blue bracts like overlapping fish scales. The true leaves are rounded like grapefruit spoons, lustrously grey_blue in color and as fleshy in texture as a succulent. The new growth is strikingly stippled with creamy stripes and flecks which fade to a subtle marbling as the leaves mature.

Although grown in European pleasure gardens since the middle ages, Cerinthe has no known medicinal uses. According to his famous book, 'The Herbal', its ornamental qualities earned honeywort a place in John Gerard's garden in the late 1500's. Gerard liked to sip honey_flavored nectar from the tiny flowers, and noted that the leaves have the taste of "new wax" or fresh honeycomb as well. Since his day, however, honeywort fell from favor. It has never been a traditional border plant, for no prominent Victorian or Edwardian gardener mentions it. Indeed, it was unavailable in the seed trade until the recent reintroduction of a well_colored European garden selection.

Native to the Mediterranean basin, wild honeywort displays a wide variation in color and form. Where Cerinthe major grows abundantly in open meadows and grassy plains in southern Italy and Greece, the flowers may be lavender, cream or pale yellow, sometimes neatly rimmed or striped with violet. The bracts may be a dull blue_green, soft or vividly blue, or warmly purple. In early summer, Greek fields of these common wildflowers are hazed with a pewtery slate blue, like a shimmering reflection of the hot summer sky.


Cerinthe Major

Seen as individuals in garden settings, honeywort plants are enchanting. The partially perfoliate leaves rise in whorls along branching stems which bend gracefully beneath their burden of blossoms and bracts. Garden grown plants vary a good deal in size and behavior. Those raised in lush, sunny settings may rise more than waist high, needing unobtrusive staking with twine and slim bamboo wands to keep them upright. Rich, open_textured soil and ample water make for an exceptional abundance of blossoms and bracts which retain their handsome appearance well into autumn.

In leaner, drier soils, plants grown in full sun may only reach two feet in height, while those grown in light shade and poor soil are generally compact and rarely over a foot and a half high. Like so many Mediterranean natives, this

handsome herb is as drought tolerant as rosemary, sage or thyme. Even when grown in unimproved, sandy soils in full sun, honeywort will bloom early and often. Indeed, in damp shade, this sun lover languishes and may rot away before fulfilling its floral potential. However, honeywort makes a fuller and far more floriferous mound when given ordinary amounts of supplementary water.

The blue bracted honeywort will particularly appeal to border colorists and flower arrangers, who are always on the lookout for good blues. This plant is especially fun to work with because it is a color changer, its bracts altering from royal blues and cloudy purples to tawny coppers and ruddy browns when backlit by slanting sun. Honeywort pairs dramatically with purple hazel, which shows the same tendency to crossover, its wide leaves shifting readily between mahogany and burgundy depending on the light.

Honeywort also makes delightful company for flaming crocosmias like sizzling orange 'Firebird' and fire red 'Lucifer', as well as smoky 'Salmon Leap' Cape fuchsias (Phygelius x rectus). To emphasize its cascading lines, try placing it with tall, arching grasses such as maiden grass, Miscanthus sinensis. It also makes a splendid companion for ruddy, fox_colored Carex buchananii or the bronzed forms of Carex comans and C. filifera.

To accentuate the murky color qualities of honeywort's burnished bracts, interplant it with masses of purple_bronze Euphorbia dulcis 'Chameleon' and near_black chervil, Anthriscus sylvestris 'Ravenswing' or the pewtery purple form, 'Moonlit Night'. The muted burgundy of shrubby Hypericum androsaemum 'Albury Purple' will echo tints in all this group of plants, rounding out the vignette with panache.

In certain parts of England, Cerinthe major 'Purpurascens' is said to be solidly hardy and evergreen to boot. Elsewhere, Cerinthe major is an annual, though the smaller, yellow_flowered Cerinthe minor is considered hardy to zone 5. Here in the Pacific Northwest, both commercial and home growers from southern British Columbia to California's Bay Area have found Cerinthe major 'Purpurascens' to be an ardently self_sowing annual.

Like ordinary borage, honeywort comes readily from its abundant seed. In the garden, however, the seeds tend to sprout in the fall and be killed by the first sharp frost. Because the seeds ripen irregularly, and because an explosive release mechanism often propels them a considerable distance from the mother plant, seed can be tricky to collect. One good way is to check the ground beneath large plants every few days, gathering small handfuls of the cylindrical black seeds as they fall.

It is also possible to harvest whole branches of blooming honeywort, bringing them inside to dry. Keep the branches lightly covered with cheesecloth or newspaper to keep the seed from shooting across the room as it dries. Although many seeds will be unripe when you gather the branches, most will ripen to maturity as the bracts wither.

To save honeywort seed over the winter, place it in a clean, dry jar with a small packet of film dessicant. A tablespoon of dried milk powder, loosely wrapped in a square of cheesecloth, will similarly absorb moisture from the air, keeping the seeds properly dry until spring.

Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Tracheobionta
Class: Magnoliophyta
Order: Fabales
Family: Boraginaceae
Genus: Cerinthe

Cercis siliquastrum


Cercis siliquastrum

Cercis siliquastrum

Cercis siliquastrum at Wisley can be found in the Arboretum, the Rock Garden, Model Garden and on Seven Acres. The Seven Acres specimen is easy to find, just beside the Lake.

Cercis

Genus of about 6 species of deciduous trees and shrubs found in woodland margins and on rocky hillsides, in the Mediterranean, E Asia and N America.

They have alternate heart-shaped leaves and have brightly coloured flowers in spring, followed by flattened pods.

Flowers are normally produced on the previous years growth, but may also be borne on wood that is several years old, either before or as the leaves unfold.

Larger species are excellent specimen plants; grow smaller ones in a shrub border or train against a wall.

The Greek name Kerkis for a European species (probably a poplar) was also applied to Cercis siliquastrum which, possibly through confusion between the name Judas and the place Judaea is now known as the tree on which Judas hanged himself.

Cercis siliquastrum

A handsome broadly spreading deciduous tree that gradually develops a rounded crown, producing clusters of pea-like pink flowers on the previous years wood, and on the main trunk.

A spreading and sometimes multi-stemmed tree with heart shaped blue-green leaves 10cm (4in) long, bronze when young turning yellow in autumn.

As with many legumes this species can fix nitrogen, and is noted for attracting wildlife. The plants are hermaphrodite and pollinated by bees.

The wood is very hard, has a beautiful grain, and is used for veneer as it polishes well.

Cultivars include C. siliquastrum f. albida (syn. 'Alba') which has white flowers, 'Rubra' and 'Bodnant' which have dark purple-pink flowers.

AGM

The RHS Floral B Committee awarded Cercis siliquastrum an Award of Garden Merit and described it as a: Bushy, deciduous small tree. Leaves to 10cm wide, broadly heart-shaped. Flowers rosy-pink, pea-shaped, in clusters on the older wood. Fruit a conspicuous flattened purplish pod to 12cm long.

Cultivation

Grow in fertile, deep, moist but well drained soil in full sun or dappled shade. It flowers best in a continental climate.

Plant in final position when young, as it resents root disturbance.

To prune, remove wayward or crossing shoots to maintain permanent, healthy framework in late winter or early spring.

The tree often does not flower well in Britain, especially if the previous summer was cool.

May suffer from canker, coral spot, Verticillium wilt, leafhoppers and scale insects. However, it is notably resistant to honey fungus.

Propagation

Sow seed in containers in a cold frame in autumn.

Root semi-ripe cuttings, or bud selected clones in summer.

Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Tracheobionta
Class: Magnoliophyta
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Genus: Cercis

Cephalanthera kurdica

Cephalanthera kurdica

C.kurdica is a beautiful ,richly blooming Cephalanthera orchid nourished mainly by symbiotic fungi -its own assimilation appratus is highly reduced .That is why the size of its rich inflorescence is in such striking disproportion with the size of reduced leaves .C. kurdica grows 28 in /70 cm long or shorter stems bearing barely 2 in/5cm long clinging or clasping leaves . The inflorescence is relatively sparse ,but it consists of a high number of (up to 40 ) shiny pink ,1 in /2.5 cm across flowers that open successively ,starting from the bottom one. This species grows in light forests and shrubberies -especially in oak woods with a lot of undergrowth . It blooms between April and June and is native to southern Turkey ,Turkish and Iraqi Kurdistan and weatern Persia.
Kingdom: Plantae
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Orchidales
Family: Orchidaceae
Genus: Cephalanthera

Centranthus longiflorus

Centranthus longiflorus

Centranthus , also called Valerian or Red valerian is a popular garden flower. Other common names include Jupiter's Beard.

A native of the Mediterranean region, Centranthus ruber has been introduced into many other parts of the world as a garden escapee. It is naturalised in both Great Britain and the United States. In the US it can be found growing wild in such western states as Arizona, Utah, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Utah, usually in disturbed, rocky places at elevations below 200 m. It is often seen by roadsides or in urban wasteland. It can tolerate very alkaline soil conditions, and will grow freely in old walls despite the lime in their mortar.

It grows as a perennial plant, usually as a subshrub though it can take any form from a herb to a shrub depending on conditions; the plants are usually woody at the base. The leaves are generally 5-8 cm in length. Their shape changes from the bottom to the top of the plant, the lower leaves being petioled while the upper leaves are sessile. The plant flowers profusely, and though the individual flowers are small (no more than 2 cm), the inflorescences are large and showy. The flowers have a strong and somewhat rank scent: they are pollinated by both beesbutterflies and the plant is noted for attracting insects. It is used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Angle Shades. The flowers are usually a purplish red, but sometimes lavender or white in colour. and

Both leaves and roots can be eaten, the leaves either fresh in salads or lightly boiled, the roots boiled in soups. Opinions differ as to whether either make very good eating, however. Although it is sometimes reported to have medicinal properties, there is no basis for this view, which is almost certainly due to confusion with true Valerian.

Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Dipsacales
Family: Valerianaceae
Genus: Centranthus

Centaurium

Centaurea vanensis

Centaurium (formerly Erythraea) is a genus containing about 50 species in the gentian family (Gentianaceae), tribe Chironieae, subtribe Chironiinae. The genus was named after the centaurChiron, famed in Greek mythology for his skill in medicinal herbs. The common name for plants in this genus is Centaury.


Centaurea tchihateffii
This genus is primarily distributed in the Mediterranean. However, species such as Centaurium littorale are widespread, but not common, between the northern Mediterranean and Scandinavia.

Centaurea nigrifilbria

This genus is primarily distributed in the Mediterranean. However, species such as Centaurium littorale are widespread, but not common, between the northern Mediterranean and Scandinavia.
Plants in the genus contain bitter principles, and are sometimes used medicinally as a stomachictonic. and tonic.
Centaurium eryhraea


Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Gentianales
Family: Gentianaceae