Wednesday 30 January 2019

Break Out from Edinburgh



Just  want to share this vision on our local canal (the Union Canal) today. It made a great noise as it broke up the ice leaving a clear channel behind. 


Saturday 26 January 2019

A Week of Weeds - Ivy

Ivy (Hedera helix) ascending and carpeting
 Controversial, I know, because this is a "native" plant that affords food and a home to many life forms. But you can get too much of a good thing.  We have a local nature reserve which is the remnants of the wooded land in this part of Edinburgh, the bits that were found to be unsuitable for housing due to rough terrain and access problems. It is a valuable conservation area but overrun with ivy.  Reputedly it takes 30 years for ivy to reach the top of a host tree. Well thirty years have passed:

On the plus side ivy flowers late in the season, from September through to November. This helps sustain a whole host of insects in the run up to winter. It is also a refuge for birds and small mammals.  But boy does it take over.  The danger to trees is more one of increasing their wind profile rather than strangulation as ivy takes up water direct from its own roots.  At ground level it deprives competing plants of light as well as water and elbow room. 


Walls or trees its all the same to ivy
 The term monoculture springs to mind, whereas biodiversity is the sign of a thriving landscape.  Human intervention may be undesirable from a nature conservation point of view but the landscape which undeniably has been formed by both nature and man, has become a playground for this successful plant to the exclusion of many others.  It's status as a native (and consequential large number of benefiting fauna) ensures that war has not been declared on it, as it has for Japanese knotweed, for instance.  It's a bit of a bind!




Friday 25 January 2019

A Week of Weeds - Speedwell and Chickweed



Here they are together, which explains why they share this post.  Cultivate some land and the first weeds to turn up will be these two.   Below is a typical vegetable bed scenario.  Under the fleece, along with the desired veg, these two have been thriving!


They are each individually innocuous but in volume, which they very soon develop, they bully the plants you want to grow and deprive them of nitrogen and water.

So which is which?  Here's Speedwell on its own (or nearly there is another weed, possibly cleavers, far right):

Speedwell: Veronica persica

And here is a Chickweed plant  (again ignore the extra weed on the right)

* Chickweed: Stellaria media


Both are very successful weeds that could be considered as green manures if it weren't for their ability to produce insignificant flowers and then seeds in such quick order.  Both are edible although chickweed is more like a spinach substitute whereas speedwell is better suited to a tea having a certain astringency about it.  To date I have not tried consuming either myself.   For the record chickweed has white flowers, whereas speedwell flowers are blue with a white centre.  If you can see the flowers it is time to weed!








* Mouse eared chickweed (Cerastium fontanum) is a similar to "ordinary" chickweed (Stellara media) but belongs to a different family.  The best account of the differences between them is at the following link

How to tell chickweeds apart

The leaves are either bare and pointed or hairy and round - like a mouses ear!


Thursday 24 January 2019

A Week of Weeds - Toadflax




Yellow "Common" Toadflax : Linaria vulgaris and Purple Toadflax: Linaria purpurea appear very similar as seedlings. But these siblings appear quite different when in flower.  The purple are at first glance a simple monotone purple spire, while the yellow offers a spike of individual flowers each twice the size of the purple ones and visibly displaying two pale yellow cowls atop two central deeper yellow bulges with a lower lip divided into three pale yellow parts. Add to this a long greenish spur at the back of the flower.  Purple toadflax's  flower lacks the two tone artifice and it's architecture is too small to be appreciated at a glance, but of the two it forms taller more dramatic clumps.  Yellow toadflax was probably introduced as a garden species before breaking out and travelling freely where it will.  You can see some nice pictures of the yellow flower at: Toadflax(Common)


Last year's growth and new seedlings
 The reason we tolerate both plants is because they are adored by bees.  They grow rather scruffily and are seldom the focal point for pictures.  I have dusted off a couple of snaps from last summer where purple toadflax does feature - in our shaded front garden bed:


Taken 16/5/18
Most of that greenery is toadflax!  And here is the same bed a month later with the toadflax now in flower:

The same bed 14/6/18 
We don't let it takeover completely but do tolerate it on account of the bees - and it does have some aesthetic value in its own right



Wednesday 23 January 2019

A Week of Weeds - Sowthistles

Prickly Sowthistle: Sonchus asper


Smooth Sowthistle: Sonchus oleraceus
You might be as surprised as me but my research has reached the firm conclusion that both of the above are sowthistles. They form a rosette to survive the winter and then spring forth in spring getting a head start on their annual competitors.


Tuesday 22 January 2019

A Week of Weeds - Hairy Bittercress

Hairy Bitter-cress: Cardamine hirsuta

Look at this fighter flowering already in January.  It's secret weapon is the speed of reproduction and explosive seed dispersal.  Brush against the plant when the seedhead is ripe and you set off a shower of projectiles, each one an irretrievable seed (on account of it's small size). Ballochory is the term for this - my new word of the day  (and not to be confused with barochory which is seed dispersal by gravity alone).  Hairy Bitter-cress  appears first as a rosette before sending up a number of stems which rapidly produce unprepossessing flowers.  Once primed the seed head reacts to your weeding efforts as a stimulus to explode.  "You are too late"  it says as it peppers your face with pellets. Moral - weed early, preferably at the rosette stage.


Monday 21 January 2019

A Week of the Weeds - Charlock

Charlock: Sinapis arvensis

It's a brassica - you can tell that on sight.  But which one and what is it doing popping up all over the garden this winter?  It's wild alright but is it wild turnip or wild mustard.  It turns out to be Charlock, which is probably THE native brassica. In seed form it is very persistent. Garden Organic advise that seeds last 12 years in dry storage but 35 to 60 years in the soil!!  Sadly the plants are host to all the brassica problems including root fly,  clubroot and cabbage whites.  For a full verification I should let these seedlings mature, but I am not keen to do that.  The bit that nailed the identification for me was the advice that Charlock can be introduced as a birdseed alien.  It is around the bird feeding stations that these seedlings have appeared.  Either direct or after passing through the digestive tract of the birds I am convinced that the birdseed is the source of these plants.  They are all coming out.













Sunday 20 January 2019

A Week of the Weeds - Shining Cranesbill

A weed with a shine?

Meet Geranium lucidum:  Shining Cranesbill.  It took me ages to identify the occupant at the end of the garden.  I own up that I once sowed Herb Robert  (Geranium robertianum) as part of a wildflower mix in our garden.  It has self seeded ever since then  (along with Yarrow, also in the mix). This invader either arrived in the same way, but was less imposing, or made its own way in.  It seems to thrive in the shadow of the trees, archway and ivy clad fence on a northsloping bed, 


A weed mounting a takeover bid

Looking very lush and quite at home in advance of the bluebells and daffodils


Healthy winter growth

At first I mistook it for Dove's Foot Cranesbill and then Round-leaved Cranesbill.  But the first doesn't have red stems and the second is found only in the South of England, so I was happy to have found the correct ID at last.  It is still a blooming nuisance but I know what I am up against!
Having the right name I can now see that Washington State Noxious Weed Control Board classified this as a grade A noxious weed in 2009 but the downgraded it to grade B in 2015.  In case you are wondering, it is not poisonous, just very hard to eradicate.  The shining part of it is the leaf, although the hairless red stems are pretty shiny too!  I will be removing a lot of this before it flowers and sets seed this year.  I am confident it will still be around in some nook or cranny for years to come however scrupulous my weeding efforts.




Thursday 10 January 2019

Flowering in January


Primula
Considering myself a vegetable grower I do love flowers too, particularly in the garden at home.  There is nothing to lift the winter spirits than a splash of flowering activity outside your window.. Most are winter stalwarts but they still surprise: 


Winter Flowering Cherry - Vertical view

Winter Flowering Cherry - Horizontal view
Here's one that is lighting up the darkest corner of the garden - on the northern side of an ivy clad fence:


Winter Jasmine - Jasminum nudiflorum

Jasminun nudiflorum 2

Other flowers are from stubborn plants which seem to flower throughout the year...


Euphorbia   Hebe!
 ...or have hung on stubbornly through the winter and aren't going to succumb just yet.

Rudbeckia Autumn Colours still hanging on
Other bloggers have been showing off their Hellebores.  Well mine are going to have to wait another year to flower.  These were grown from home saved seed sown in 2017. Just as well as there is no sign of the parent plant this spring!

Hellebores !
I may be a bit previous to call it spring, but there are signs that the plants think it is just around the corner.


The prospect of things to come.