Sunday, 27 March 2011

Gold and Brown

Hello and welcome to "I Can't Quite Believe I've Managed This". It's where I take the opportunity to use my own photography of my own plants to  show off and prove that I wasn't making it all up. The first offering took me totally by surprise as the bloom is the same colour as the pinewood on the inside of the bulb frame (although it's propped right open now, as all contents, with the possible exception of the Gladioli and Moraea corms/bulbs no longer need protction from the rain, which hasn't fallen for weeks anyway).

It's Iris orchiodes, whose flowers have a beautiful greenish tinge to their essestially yellow flowers and that orangey/brown line on the fall. Its native habitat is the Tien Shan mountains of central Asia, the natural home of so many of the juno types, as well as the regalia and oncocyclus. In fact all the nicest ones.


Iris Orchiodes is relatively easy to grow (compared to other juno irises, not rhubarb). In the wild it would grow in scree or rocky hillsides, offering incredibly free drainage so that big, fat bulb and the chunky, baby-carrot like roots never sit in water but have it wash through them as the snows melt further up the mountain, depositing minerals and nutrients aplenty and then passing on down the hill to visit something else beautiful. On the roof, I grow all my junos in clay pots, which dry out far quicker than plastic. That's not to say they'll survive like that cactus in your hall, watered annually, exposed to draught every time the door is open and grateful for every ray of light.


First, potting medium: many eschew a humus-based compost, preferring soil-based. I'm saying nothing but the plant you are looking at is quite happy in a mix of good quality potting compost, plenty of perlite, gravel, sand and slow-release fertiliser granules. The pot doesn't need to be too big: the top of the bulb should be just below the surface, which should be covered with gravel to protect the neck of the bulb and emerging shoot from stem rot.


Plant in your dry mixture any time from late summer onwards, when the bulbs are dormant and it's very,very dry in Tajikistan. Keep yours out of the rain too, ideally in an alpine house or bulb frame but I have been known to improvise with upturned fish tanks and even clear plastic storage boxes. (Assuming you live in the UK) you can start waking it up either when it tells you it's ready by poking a single green bud through the gravel or give it a water around the end of January, avoiding the centre of the pot.

This should be enough to kick start growth but don't panic if it doesn't, just wait a bit and try again. Unless you've had really bad luck and something's eaten it (mouse-proofing might help although I've never had a problem with them, just squirrels eating my lilies) or it's rotted, it's just waiting till it feels Caucasian enough. As it grows, so your watering (and feeding about every three weeks with tomato or bulb food) regime grows. Remember, this is a very well drained potting mix and once growing the Iris needs to not only build up the strength to do that amazing yellow thing again next year (this year's flower comes from last year's energy store) but it will also probably want to start building a second bulb. If you're unlucky it will put so much effort into this it won't flower at all but put all its energy into this new bulb but, looking on the bright side, you'll get a double display next year).

Some junos will manage only a single flower such, as I. nicolai, which barely gets off the ground in the wild, sheltering behind the odd stone and struggling to an inch or two. It does a little better in cultivation heightwise but I've still only ever seen one bloom, although one seen, never forgotten. Definitely one for next year now I've got the bare minimum of experience. The fact that it'll cost around £30 for a flowering sized bulb (I'll go to Paul Christian Rare Plants first, he provided so much of what's bursting forth around me that I can't recommend him highly enough and no, he's not my dad or  anything (the closest I could get to nepotism is bigging up Glendoick but they don't really need the publicity).

All the signs were there on Jan 1
I don't think Iris cycloglossa or svetlanae are going to flower this year. The former has sent up a healthy wee shoot but it looks more like an off-set than something that's going to turn into that unique helter-skelter flower formation that sets it apart from all other Irises. Svetlanae has obviously split, as predicted when I took the photo on the left on New Year's Day - there are now two clear shoots that are 6in long, thin and so floppy I've had to tie them up to a stick for their own good.  The floppiness doesn't to be caused by anything pathological but I've treated it with sulphur anyway.

Irises bucharica, magnifica, aucheri (a mighty foot tall) and zenaidae (controversially claimed by one source to be a form of I. graeberiana from the Tien Shan are budding up nicely and I reckon aucheri should manage about half a dozen typically icy blue flowers although as it has such a wide distribution, from northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey,  northern Syria, western Iran and Jordan (just about anywhere with a civil war at the moment) there is some variation in the shade of blue although all are scented and robust, relatively easy plants to grow.

Bucharica is incredibly easily grown in the UK and unless you live in a bog it should thrive outdoors in a sunny, well-drained spot. I grow mine in a pot only because a) I don't have a garden and b) I like to keep track of the off-sets andit's a lot easier to tip out a pot every three or four years than it is to get the fork out and posssibly skewer the bulbs or damage the carrot-like roots. It's a handsome yellow and white but my pan of bulbs is a bit behind this year and won't flower for another week or more.

Zenaidae is much rarer (if what I paid for it is anything to go by) but it looks like having multiple blooms too. It is violet blue. Magnifica is a chunky fella that can easily reach two feet if happy. Its white flowers are borne in abundance, or will be soon, and it's another worth trying in the rockery if you can afford to lose it. None of the juno Irises is susceptible to cold, it's water in the leave axils, around the stem and around the bulb that's the killer.

If you don't grow them yet I suggest bucharica in a pot as a starting point. Don't buy  those awful packs hanging up in supermarkets or garden centres, what suits a bag of clementines may not be the ideal environment for a dormant (but not dead) flower bulb.

And now, from gold to brown


Fritillaria uva-vupis
Who'd have thought a genus made up largely of brown flowers could have such an ardent following? To be fair they're not all brown, there's a lot of green and black in there too, and the odd browny-pink, plenty of yellow but it's an unusual bunch to be sure. There are three main groups, those that hail from Europe, mostly Greece and Bulgaria but we do have our own F. meleagris, which is possibly native or an escapee but certainly loves a moist bit of meadowland. Then there's those from eastern Turkey and all points east through the former Soviet states. The third are North American and, unsurprisingly given the distance, they are surprisingly similar in their variety, if that makes sense. What I mean is there is a huge variety of flower shapes (usually based roughly on a bell), colours and forms.

I'm growing about 20 and showed you stenanthera (pinky brown) and bucharica (white) a few weeks ago and then there are these two flowering side by side: brown and gold; and orangey brown!

F. uva-vulpis is one of the easier  species, it should be happy in the garden in a well-drained, sunny spot. They like a lot of water when in growth so the rockery might not be the best spot unless you're prepared for some precision watering. As long as the corms are not sitting in wet soil you should be okay. When planting, it can be extremely difficult to tell which way is up so we tend to plant them on their side, that way you can't fail. It would do no harm to prepare the soil with some well-rotted compost or manure, and then lay each bulb on a little pile of grit or sand. This is all done in autumn and they will start to appear alarmingly early from January but they know what they're doing!

Fritillaria minuta
I think the "minuta" refers more to the bulbs, which are like peas, than the plants which are hardly giants but a good 3-4 inches tall which is not small for the genus. I've got three corns in a 3.5in pot and that looks proportionate.

I'm so pressed for space that everything is crammed into a corner on the ground until I spot it making its move, whence it's whipped onto the windowsill meaning you get a great view from the living room.

And that's less than half of it! The majority of these are lilies in various stages of development, from germinating (regale) to 3ft tall ("Tiger Woods")
Can you spot the Meconopsis? I must pot them on in case they flower (and die). The Clematis tower is almost invisible thanks largely to "Jacqueline du PrĂ©" which is about to be cloaked in pink bells, with a bit of help from  "Niobe" and the Tangutica-like one ... oh yes, the memorably titled tibetana subsp. vernayi var. vernayi 'Orange Peel'. It looks like all the yellow Tanguticas, like Bill MacKenzie.
You can just see the crappy greenhouse on the left and hidden beyond that is the bulb/cold frame. It really is very hard to turn round, especially if you're holding something. You'll either kick something or drop it.
See what I mean?



This little thing, about 3 inches tall, has lost its label. It matches F. aurea but that's too easy. Can anyone offer any suggestions? Unfortunately the single bloom is not of show-winning quality but I love it anyway!

So I can't fill you in any further on that particular golden girl but lets move to Iraq (not literally, that might be a bit dangerous at the moment) ...

F. kurdica v. taylish snapped in my bathroom. Not because it lives there, it lives outdoors like the rest of them, but it was too windy outside to get a less blurred shot. Not sure I succeeded! The name gives a clue to the spiritual home ...

One of the main benefits of Fritillarias is that they come into bloom in a steady stream from the end of February (in London) until they stop, which will be at least a month. And when they "go over" they don't cause too much of a mess like a pot of Daffs would.

The feeding regime is exactly like that for the bulbous Irises. As long as the plant is photosynthesising it should be fed and watered but with a weaker and weaker food solution as the plant goes back into dormancy.

You can leave some outside in their pots year-round, that's what I'm doing although you must have a well-drained potting mixture as the bulbs abhore sitting in the wet. I lost one (not a bad rate) over the winter, F. montana, and I'm blaming its sitting in excessive wet. It wasn't the cold, you really don't have to give a shit about the cold with Frits, other than to hop to give them a good, hot baking in the summer, such as they would get on a rocky Central Asian hillside. It's cold AND damp that will get them so I suggest a bit of internet research on which ones you really need to cover. The list varies geographically so I'm afraid I can't really tell you.

Propagation is by off-set (I'm getting them already and the corms have only been flowering size for a year) or seed, which is easy if you're in no hurry. I don't know if fresh seed helps because I've never sown any but I did try acmopetala, graeca and whittalli last autumn. A few whittalli came up really quickly and then winter came along and they went into stasis but survived almost exactly as they were until a few weeks ago when the other two pots zipped up at exactly the same time as the first bulb to flower, stenanthera, bloomed. So this points so some benefit in stratification but no conclusive need for it.

F.acmopetala seedlings. I only planted them as an experiment, given that I already had the mature thing but there's something very satisfying about raising bulbs from seed. And they're a lot easier to prick out the dicots. 

These must be graeca. I'm not showing you these for artistic reasons, it's more of a proof thing

Crikey, the sun must have gone in for this one! It's whittalli and you can still see a seed capsule on the end of one shoot, that's how quickly they get moving. And I know the window frame could do with a coat of paint but it's a rented property so not my problem!

Can you see the two life-size greenfly on the left-hand flower? Aphids are a bit of a problem with Frits but only really a danger as the growth tip emerges and develops, at which time you can be easily lightly grasp the shoot and run your fingertips up it, brushing them off or, better, squishing them.

This medium-sized Frit is the snappily named Fritillaria hermonis amana from the south of Turkey (which makes it Asian, just).  I love the way all the species have that tessellation in some form or other.  Even bucharica, which on first glance looks white or cream, is actually white and cream, thanks to wonder that is nature. I can remember if F. persica has it, though I'm sure it does, as it's only a foot tall at the moment and just developing its flowers. Mind you, those 12 inches took about five days to grow from a little green thimble into the slightly intimidating mass of vegetation that is now threatening to take over the roof.

It has black/brown/purple bells and I used to grow it as a child (I was very precocious) but I forget exactly what its flowers were like other than huge.


It's coming to get you! Fritillaria persica
This is the biggest of the lot by some way, with the tedious and pointless Crown Imperial, F. imperialis, next with orange or yellow bells but it's not as nice as it sounds. The only place I would recommend it is in an old-style English country garden where it multiplies quickly to form a splash of colour for a week or two and then a mess of decaying foliage for six months, which you could hide with a Dahlia or similar.

The yellow form works well here but they have to be planted en masse to get any effect and that's a lot of spent foliage to hide for the sake of a few flowers. But maybe I'm being a snob.
This is F. elwesii from Turkey (surprise!), Cyprus and Lebanon

There follows a conundrum. The above two shots are definitely what is says on the packet, although the bottom of the petals will flare out a little more but not much. Now look at what was sold to me as F. acmopetala:


Can you see the difference? A catalogue picture of acmopetala looks like this:


but ranges to this:


The two species are definitely close and may have inter-bred in the wild, meaning true species are had to come by as they live in the same areas and occupy the same habitiat. I think when both my species flare at the bottom they will be impossible to tell apart. Who'd be a taxonomist, eh?

Last one (and even more confusing):

F. acmopetala v. wendelboi





Whhile this is undeniably gorgeous, even if the bottom of the petals do flare out, it is not foing to look like this from fritillaria.org.uk, who must know what they're talking about. Maybe there are just so many species spread over such a large area that purity of genetics is a falsehood and similar species have been having been putting it about a bit, resulting in a bit of a genetic mess. Or maybe several people sent me the wrong bulbs. I favour the former as I know and trust my suppliers, many of whom have been to these places and brought back seed .


I dunno, it's enough to make a tee-totaller's head hurt on a Sunday morning, especially as there is water from my flat (totally dry) apparently pouring into the cafe below. I could do without that on a day where we've already lost an hour to move to GMT+1 for the farmers and schoolkids walking to school in the morning. Now they jusy get run over at night instead.

A few pretty blooms to end on a high:


A selection of Corydalis flexuosa from China, I'll name it tomorrow if I remember although it's actually the foliage that's doing it for me
The emerging foliage of Lilium tsingtaoense, which is frankly more attractive than its starry orange flowers. And I mean "starry" as in shaped like a star, not with the attributes of, say, Shirley Bassey
f
Cute one this: a yellow form of Pulsatilla caucasica
And who can resist a macro shot of the neighbours?

Well, that's all for now but as you can see things are taking off and when I'm not pricking out I'm spraying a hose around. Down to one Delphinium semibarbatum but it's really picked up. Three nudicaule survived the slugs although another two stems refuse to die, despite having no leaves.

Alstroemerias are germinating, one of my mystery pots is definitely a primula and I know it's not a candelabra. Might be wilsonii. And the mystery turquoise Delphinium is taking well to transplantation, as are several other anonymous things. The blue Lathyrus sativus is germinating like hot cakes and aureus has been pricked out and picked up the baton. I want some Irises soon but I've got a horrible feeling the Asiatic hybrid Lilies are going to flower before too long.

Swings, roundabouts and compost. Have a great week and speak to me! I is on Twitter, yah know what I is sayin bruv?

Safe.


Sunday, 20 March 2011

Fit Frits

Hello there! Fancy meeting you here. This is where people obsessed to a slightly potty degree with pretty much all manner of decorative plants other than gaudy hybrids, and even some of them, come for help in the form of exposure therapy. I show you the plants and you get all giddy! Speaking of giddy moments, it's quiz time again!

To what giant do these emerging leaves belong?

Curiosity sated at the bottom of the page, in the traditional manner, although I'm not sure my skills extend to turning it through 180 degrees, but I'll try

It has mainly been a week of seeds. Sowing, rescuing, the dreaded pricking out and a few fist-pumping "my God, it works" moments, like when one of the Cyanella lutea seeds that have been sitting, almost forgotten, in a shady corner of the propagator, dent up a shoot. Suffice it to say the pot has now been promoted to the only spot that gets any daylight, in the forlorn hope that it might not get too leggy while I give it a few more days in the hope that it might aquite a few chums, otherwise it's out to a cloche and chlorophyl. It really is the most gorgeous thing imaginable, I don't know why it isn't better known.

It's so lovely it should be an orchid!



But the highlight was the blooming of Fritillaria verticillata (syn. thunbergii) and F. bucharica, the third and fourth in  a series which is likely to last well into April, if not November. Verticillata's a tall thing, well, it would be if the only bloom wasn't holding the stem at an angle of 45˚ (yippee, I've finally found the glyph for "degrees") which looks quite a lot like F. meleagris v. alba if you haven't got your glasses on but the wonder is on the inside of the flowers, which are chequed brown and green. Have a look, none of these really does it justice but the slightest gust when you're that close with a macro lens and it all goes organic pear-shaped.

It was very sunny on Saturday so there was no way for an amateur like me to avoid the glare from the outer petals at the top of the shot and it looks daft if you crop them out


See what I mean about the Plain Jane outside? All it needs to do is take off its specs, take the whatever it is women use to hold their hair in a dowdy way, shake it free and then cross its legs on the desk in a skirt which has remarkably lost four inches from the hem-line when no-one was looking
Crisp marking, blurred sex organs (you see I have to slip these innuendoes in to take it up the search engine) 

Last one, just to give you an idea of stature and motherhood:

Actually, it's quite hard to make out all the babies round the bottom but there are four that should be flowering size next year, which opens a whole tins of pilchards but we'll worry about that in the autumn.


Right, enough of that, have I taken any half-decent pictures of F. bucharica? I'm off for a look ...

Fritillaria bucharica is a large, early-flowering member of the Rhinopetalum section, which also includes stenanthera, the grey-pink one from last week, from Central Asia and northern Afghanistan, growing mainly on landmines, that's assuming there are any unexploded bulbs left, in the foothills. Fairly easy, but a bulb frame contender in the UK.
It loves a good bake in the summer so keep watering and give a weak tomato or bulb fertiliser every 3 or 4 weeks, following the instructions carefully, thus making sure there isn't a build-up of NPK salts which hill burn the roots. It's very tempting to think that more Miracle-Gro = more flowers etc but there comes a point where it does more harm than good. But you knew that. Anyway, ease off the watering and stop feeding altogether, the plant will tell you when it's about to go dormant by turning brown and falling over. This is the time to stop water altogether until you want to wake it up at end of the year. If you're growing outside in Britain make sure the soil is as gritty and well-drained (yet moisture retentive, yes, I know) as possible and cover if possible, especially in the autumn, in case a shower kick starts growth too early. Or just leave it to it, it'll probably prefer the space.

Note the plastic pot. I'm experimenting because, while clay looks much more rustic, it is of course porous and liable to dry out and this is the time of the year that the plants are taking on provisions for next year so it's importtant to keep it just moist. And when you garden on a roof with no access other than to climb out the window, watering is an important consideration!

Frits are quite easy to grow from seed if you have patience. They seed freely and some of the rarer ones are out there on the web (try rareplants.de, a German treasure trove), eBay, Chilterns always have a good selection and most years offer a mixed bag which is good if you don't mind not knowing the name but has its problems because, while most germinate suddenly within days, hours even, of each other, it's best to leave them in the sowing pot for the first two seasons before potting each up singly. But if you have a variety of varieties you might get a raddeana (think turnip) next to a minuta (think marble) which would make pricking out even more of a nightmare than the horrible job already is (if you're wondering why I hate the job so much it's because I spent a summer at the world-famous Glendoick nursery and gardens in Perthshire doing little else, mostly Primulas and Meconopsis. The closest  I got to the holy Rhododendrons was planting out two-year-olds by hand in fields I'd just rotovated - have you ever tried reversing a tractor  uphill and round a corner  with a bogie on the back? It's actually impossible). And God help you if you forgot to label them!

Anyway, back to Frits from seed, I'd recommend plastic pots, a mix of your bog-standard compost, vermiculite and slow release fertiliser, bearing in mind the plants are going to be in there for two years. I sowed in autumn but that's only because that's when I decided to do it.

These are acmopetala, sown thinlyso they have enough room to develop underground as wel as above. I sowed them last September or October and they germinated about a month ago. F. graeca behaved in exactly the same way, germinating the same day and whittallii managed a few came up almost immediately and the rest at the same time as the others. I'm not sure what happens next: I have grown meleagris from seed before but that was 20 years ago! If they follow the liliacae formula then a true leaf should arrive soon as those little blades can't be making much chlorophyll. I will of course keep you up to date.


And here's a little taster of what's coming next time:

Fritillaria uva-vulpis, not quite there yet but any day now!


While we're on the subject, can anyone help me identify this little fella? He's not open yet, which I appreciate doesn't help, but the label has gone walkabout, infuriatingly much as the "permanent" marker had left me with a dozen pots of I have no idea what. It's very short, maybe 2in high at most. Maybe when it has opened I'll get a better response.


 I spent yesterday morning pricking out several pots of God know what. The only clue I have is they're dicots so hopefully when the true leaves show I'll get a better idea, after all I bought them!

Regulars might remeber a post a few weeks back when I saw some seedlings in a pot with a mature white Tricyrtis and thought they looked very like an anonymous pot I have and, having sown a pot of mixed Tricyrtis (why? I've got four or maybe five) I thought perhaps the seedlings in the the white pot were Tricyrtis seedlings. So I carefully pricked them out and yesterday did the same with the anonymous pot (one of so many). However, the anonymous pot has one seedling with a true leaf and is definitely from a packet of Delphinium seeds I bought from Chilterns (my first stop always for good and slightly wacky seed) called "Delphinium Unknown Variety". This was like honey to a bee for me! They say only "We have received this seed only with the information that the flowers are turquoise-blue. It seemed a pity not to include this in the Catalogue for you to try - we will too. It might be a giant, it might be a dwarf!"
I'm not a huge fan of the genus, I just like the ones that aren't blue. I pricked out the last three D. nudicaule yesterday as I have a huge slug problem. Not huge slugs. Small slugs, lots of them. So I have one amazing yellow D. semibarbatum (syn. zalil) clinging to life in the greenhouse, its co-struggler lost the good fight this week, and three of the red nudicaule, only one of which has two leaves because gastropods love 'em so. I have almost 20 of the "turquoise" one so hopefully we're okay there. And all for a genus  I'd put at no.79 in my top 100. Incidentally, it turned out that the seedlings I'd been nurturing from the white pot were what we in the UK call chickweed, "weed" being the operative syllable!

Of the things pricked out that I can identify, there are some lovely vigorous Lathyrus aureus and really sweet little Dianthus arenarius "Little Maid". Then there were the Delphiniums and a whole load of other fiddly stuff but I need to get them above slug height. I just hope they don't turn out to be weeds too! It also makes one feel quite worthy, although you make some space and then you fill it and take up even more.
Random thought! Lilium Macklinae's through!

Lilium Macklinae, found by Frank Kingdon-Ward high in the mountains of northern Burma and named after his wife. It was first thought to be a Nomocharis and it does look more like the latter .
Now I need oxypetalum and at least one of my Nepalenses plus those nameless little things I bought as "Lilium from Sechuan x 3" and I'll be well chuffed.
I'd given up hope but during this, my first year of Lily growth, I've realised that they don't all break the surface at once. Which is handy as I've a bag of 3 liechtlinii sitting over there wondering what to do. I should just chuck it: for some bizarre reason one of three hybrids I ordered months ago but which arrived this week, is yellow with black flecks. Why did I order that over blacks and all sorts?

Also in the package from Hydes were three hybrids:  "Pearl Jennifer", "Forever Susan" and "Slate's Select" as well as cernuum (again) and those blasted lietchtlinii.

The ain't cheap but they are quality bulbs and well worth waiting for. They also came with very detailed planting instructions, down to the pH level of the soil (I'd never considered this before.


L. "Pearl Jennifer"
L. leichtlinni. I suppose the hybrid will have more flowers, or something


"Forever Susan". If I'm going to break my rules and buy hybrids, why didn't I go for another fun one like this instead of that tedious yellow thing? Perhaps it's because Lilium pyrenaicum ran riot in our Scottish garden that I can get enough of yellow lilies. And there's colombianum, parryi, citronella, hansonii and the yellow martagon

L. cernuum. Which I've already got. I really should write things down. It's the Lithium

The other delivery was a n extremely cute little thing called Pulsatilla caucasica (YELLOW form), Tulbaghia violacea, 10 yellow (I'm obsessed)! Tigridia pavonia, Gladiolus "Charm" and Gladiolus Primulinus "Atom". Shall we have a sneak preview? Yeah? Well you can't because while the Pulsatilla is mentioned on the Web, there are no pics.

I thought all yellow Tigridias would look a bit classier than a mix
Tulbaghia violacea. An odd purchase, I must have been making up the numbers ...

Gladiolus nanus "Charm". Getting a bit too close to the big, blousy hybrids
Gladiolus nanus "atom"

I've been sowing away like mad and am beginning to get the first results with Lathyrus sativus v. azureus, a perennial blue sweet pea, beginning to come through, the tropical looking Mina lobata I showed you last week and Tropaeolums tricolor and "Caribbean Crush", the palest pastel nasturtium imaginable (mind you, a pale nasturtium is a rare beast).

Lathyrus sativus v. azureus
Tropaeolum tricolor

T. "Caribbean Crush"

And last night I brought the sowing kit inside (everyone else was on a Monopoly pub crawl which for a tee-totaller like myself might have been a bit dull). So despite having two mature specimens and a single seedling that escaped the local wildlife, I had another go at Meconopsis betonicifolia (you know what it looks like) and the following:

Nemesia "Shooting Stars". Looks like an orchid, smells like coconut. Only downer is it's an annual.
Absolutely stunning Chilean beauty, Leontochir ovallei
Oh God, this is a mouthful: Michauxia Tchihatcheffii
Geranium sinense
Impatiens "Red Wine"

Salvia Glutinosa
Balbisia peduncularis

Right, that's enough. I'll leave you with a blue (ok, purple) Rhododendron I'm rather proud of. It's in focus and everything!



Oh and Clematis Jacqeline du Pré too and that's it!



Oh, it's Cardiocrinum giganteum. Happy gardening! Cx