I line up it so enchanting that the few plant adventurer who are still out there looking for new plant species , carry on to find new unexplored or rediscovered plants . Even though we must clearly be reaching the bottom of the barrel , there are many genus and species which still need greater recognition , or let ’s say – find by the full-grown retailers , or by the expectant , Dutch propagators and distributors . The fact is , most works whether they are good performers or not in the garden , never make it to the shelves of big box stores and nurseries for no other reason beyond the more tactical ones on merchant marine size of it ( too tall for shelves or too large for containers when the bloom , or in particular , a opposition to bloom at the right retail clip – a big limitor in a market place where a majority of citizenry are entry - level gardeners unfamiliar with what industrial plant they are bribe .
Oenothera caespitosa ( Eee - noth - thera sez - pit - TOE - sah ) is a precious , alpine verision of the more skinny first cousin ’s we have all stress in our gardens . This is not rough-cut Evening Primrose ( and by the way , it ’s not even slightly related to primrose no matter what eBay says . ) . This one is good for our Western dry gardeners , or in a public treasury , which is where I conjure up mine . It ’s a xeriscape plant that more of us should be growing . A aboriginal North American with jumbo flowers that attract hawk moths at Nox . pot in Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin , gravel and a nutritionally debile cadaver , this Oenothera has a flower which is so out of scurf to the plant , that it can be lurid . have alone it ’s utter sort – like a Trefoil Girl Scout cooky , I ’d say , except a morsel larger . My bloom are about 3 inches across .
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This military post is chop-chop becoming a bit of a taxonomy moral , albeit a puzzling one at that , but plant species are continually being re - evaluated by botanists and those who hit the books various taxon – and so it goes with one species of what I had originally acquired as Lapeirousia laxa , which over the preceding ten years had require a recording label change to Lapeirousia cruenta , Anomatheca cruenta , and Anomatheca laxa until the taxonomists landed on Freesia laxa – what ev ’s , I like making labels .
Bulbs , or I should say ‘ geophytes ’ as Freesia is technically a corm and not a medulla , are ridiculously well-fixed to raise from seed . I really wonder why I do n’t raise more South African bulb from seed ( no probs , I really raise enough for most man ! ) . They generally bloom within 3 old age , and once they do , the sens seem to get full with each passing class . This is one species that goes hibernating in mid summer , emerging once again after a long juiceless period in the glasshouse unremarkably around February .
This selection is pure white , yet accord to the Pacific Bulb Society Wiki , is most exchangeable to a name option Freesia laxa ‘ Joan Evans ’ , but this pot look more like the all blank form of Freesia laxa . It was purported to be wild collected seed .

Cynanchum ascryfoliumFirst off , bad name – great plant . secondly off – scary genus ( some Cynanchum species are awfully invasive , but – not this one . You are really getting your botanical Latin workout today . Cynachum ascryfolium is one of those works that looks pretty unstimulating when take in in a exposure , it ’s jost not that photogenic I guess , but when see in the garden ? Take my give-and-take , it ’s spectacular .
Nice , tight grower , healthy and tough , swarm of little white flowers and unspoilt of all – it ’s a great performing artist – I think of sturdy , not invasive and gentle to grow . Not that I am an expert or even that familiar with this flora , as I just divide my first clump which I recieved from a friend a few weeks ago ( he recieved his from glasshouse woman Ellen Hornig years ago ) , and given out extreme drouth and warmth – it did n’t wilt at all . He said that it was one of his favortie plants , and I can see why . Today , all three clumps are thick , full and bright with flower just hebdomad after I divided it .
Since I am Modern to this plant , I had to research it a bit , but there is n’t too much information out there . Some sites tell me that it is a relative from the milkweek family , actially , more acurately it is placed within the family Apocynaceae – still , a few ledger still place the genus Cynanchum within Asclepiadaceae , but Asclepiadaceae is decent treated as a sub - family within Apocynaceae - ( I fuck , correct ? ) – always a in force fact to chat about at the lunch table ) .

Regardless of where all of this taxonomess nets out , it ’s a bit interesting that Apocynaceae is a plant family which contains mostly tropic plant , which explains why I rarely arrive across it with pen about garden plants in New England . I do farm many of these plant though , but they are more potential to be found in containers in my glasshouse , such as Plumeria , Nerium ( oleander ) , Pachypodium and Allamanda . Out in the garden , there are a couple of familiar members however- such as Vinca and Amsonia . Most of the plants in this folk have milklike , white sap not unlike the milkweeds .
More interesting though is what the common name of Cynachum ascryfolium reveals – Cruel Plant . Apparantly some species are able to capture insects and temporarily hold on to them , but I can find piddling information on this habit .
Cynanchum was relatively unidentified in this state until collectors begin bringing it back in the mid 1990 ’s from Central China to Korea and Japan . My plant amount to my garden just a few week ago from a friend ( a blog follower who is strike to Ecuador , who invited me to his garden to ‘ dig treasures’- prissy , right-hand ? ) . you may discover plantshere at Plant Delights . I am not sure if they still carry it .

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