Sunday, 19 May 2013

May



Conservative estimates place the garden at a fortnight behind the usual display, but certain areas seem more like four weeks away from the glory that one might normally expect. Regardless of this there is joy and wonder to behold in all corners of the garden, and a combination of a warm and cool spell has brought on or prolonged certain displays! Unfortunately through all of this excitement we find ourselves trapped in the classroom, as the annual three month lecture block grinds on. But we take heart and feel inspired by the floral gems being discovered each day, and the magnificent views revealed in a garden with such beautiful maturity.

The unfurling splendour of Cornus nuttallii x florida

Cornus blooms open out into large white buttons, as seen here with C. ‘Ormonde’

Down by the river long swathes of Cow Parsley and Camassia have suddenly erupted!

In the Queen’s Garden, an arch of Laburnum x watereri ‘Vossii’ begins its extravagant display. Such features later offer the additional benefit of dappled shade during the summer sun

The intense colours of the fresh foliage and stems of Acer palmatum ‘Sango-kaku’

Kew holds an extensive Fritillary collection, this gem is Fritillaria reuteri

A cheery but unknown late-flowering species of Narcissus

From Asia, Tulipa tschimganica

Sarracenia are carnivorous plants that digest flies and other unfortunate blighters! The flowers have this surreal masked appearance; hiding quite standard-looking floral naughty bits inside. This hardy hybrid is Sarracenia x catesbaei

A specimen of Arpophyllum giganteum on show in one of the orchid display cases

A pleasant and floriferous tropical weed, Turnera ulmifolia

The arresting foliage of Piper ornatum! Commonly known as Pepper Vines, the most famous of the Piper family is P. nigrum from which black pepper is harvested

Over in the Waterlily House the giant Santa Cruz waterlily, Victoria cruziana, is providing one of the most exciting sights in the garden! Native to Paraguay, the floating leaves can reach 2m across!

Just outside the Waterlily House, this impassioned chap makes a brazen attempt to steal the show!

Saturday, 18 May 2013

Green spam


Good day! If you have a moment I would like to bend your ear with details of a day of lectures taking place at Kew and organised by the Kew students and the Kew Mutual Improvement Society. The event, ‘Growing vegetables, communities and sustainability’, takes place on Saturday 1st June and brings together six experts who will explore the benefits that growing vegetables can have on the environment and local communities. Here is the official hype for your consideration;
 
“Growing vegetables can be an extremely useful pathway to engage with a whole range of wider issues. The Kew Mutual Improvement Society believes that as a botanic garden we need to expand our social and environmental role, and growing veg could provide the platform to engage with a wider spectrum of society. We must move beyond the boundaries of our gardens and work with communities to promote sustainability. This would provide part of a significantly more holistic approach to conservation. This event will explore these issues as a means to bring about positive change within these gardens and beyond”.
 
Speakers on the day include biologist Colin Tudge, author of Good Food for Everyone Forever and the Secret Life of Trees. Vertical Veg expert, Mark Ridsdill Smith, will focus on growing food in small spaces, and Kevin Frediani from Paignton Zoo Environmental Park will discuss urban agriculture and plant conservation. The garden designer and all-round good egg Cleve West will share stories from his own allotment in London, and Joris Gunawarden from Sutton Community Farm will relate the success of London’s only community farm. Finally, Jenny Foulkes from the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh will talk about the Edible Gardening Project which has been teaching garden visitors and local communities the skills they need to grow their own veg.
 
Further information and tickets can be found here and here. Please feel free to share this event if you know a green fingered cove that might be interested!

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

The Wood Lands


The Woodland Garden is one of several areas at Kew that look utterly glorious at this time of year. Many species that grow in woodland conditions have adapted their growth to flower in spring, making the most of the comparatively high light levels. Deciduous woodland trees are only just beginning to unfurl their fresh foliage, so these cunning woodland coves mop up the available light before the canopy forms overhead and they are plunged into dappled light or complete darkness! Some early flowering woodland specimens will disappear after setting seed, dying back completely until late winter next year; however some others will tough it out for the summer months and proudly brave their foliage amidst the shaded conditions. Thankfully the Woodland Garden is well planted so after this early peak the interest continues, with many later-flowering specimens still to come such as the Actea and Lilium. I am somewhat distracted by lectures at this point in time, but I hope you enjoy these highlights of a recent, brief, foray into the garden!
 
 
The familiar snowdrop-type glory of Leucojum aestivum

Erythronium hendersonii has these richly coloured tepals, and is one of many Erythronium species planted in the Woodland Garden

Erythronium oregonum reveals the drooping nature of these wonderful flowers! Erythronium ‘Hidcote Beauty’ can be seen here, a gem we grew on the Acid Border at Hidcote

Dense clumps of Fritillaria imperialis are one of the most exciting features to be seen at this time of year, these incredible plants seen best in strong groups

Detail of the F. imperialis, which are also a favourite of the honeybees and bombus

The fresh foliage of Sorbus aronioides bears these delicate wrinkles, followed by white flowers and then later on by autumn berries

The magnolia display is well underway at Kew, this here is M. sprengeri var. diva

Magnolia campbellii is one of the best species, and is completely covered in huge, Alice in Wonderland, cup-and-saucer blooms!

The buds are covered in thick hair, which fall away as the wonder unfurls

The floral parts are suitably beautiful!

One of my most enjoyable sights of the year, Fritillaria meleagris


Sunday, 31 March 2013

Palm House II

 
Sadly, this was the last week of my placement in the Palm House. Three glorious months have passed by in the blink of an eye, and after a brief Easter break all first year students will be recalled to the School of Horticulture to begin a gruelling three months of lectures (pint of coffee please, barkeep!) Working in the Palm House has been an absolute joy, and I’m extremely depressed that my heady, tropical days are over. The work involved was truly splendid, from the day-to-day maintenance such as watering and feeding, plus extra tasks such as pruning the canopy and pollinating cycads. I was responsible for the centre beds in the house, the Americas, with Australasia up in the north end of the house and Africa in the south. The geographic planting works surprisingly well, and the north end in particular has a noticeably different atmosphere to the planting. Tropical plants are fascinating old devils, and it has been great fun noticing and learning about all of the quirks and adaptations they have developed and employ! Amongst the climbing plants you have the Passiflora with their delicately coiled tendrils, quite discreet in their manner, but then you also have the Rattans which lack all of the good manners of the Passiflora and have whips extending from the plant in all directions and covered in hooks! Like pirates throwing grapnels over the side of a ship they are about to board and maraud, the hooks latch on to any plant in the vicinity and enable the Rattans to scramble aboard and grow on up through the canopy. Philodendrons are another tropical climber, typified by huge pointed leaves and dangling aerial roots that look quite fantastic drooping from the host tree. Like our native ivy, this growth can sometimes become too heavy and the tree will collapse underneath. Clearly this is disastrous for our unfortunate host, but the sudden appearance of a gaping hole in the dense canopy is greeted with cheers of delight by all of the seeds, seedlings and young plants lingering around in the darkness below! This small scale clearance serves an important role in the rainforest, but some other clambering eggs are considerably less helpful in their approach. Ficus benghalensis, the banyan tree, climbs up its victim and sends down aerial roots to the ground, but these become like trunks and expand to enormous widths. Inevitably the host is croaked beneath all of this vigorous growth, but instead of opening up light for the other plants below the tree is simply replaced by the voracious fig!
 
The relationships between plants and animals in the rainforest are quite complex, and jolly interesting! Poison dart frogs, for example, raise their tadpoles in Bromeliad species. Bromeliads grow on the branches of trees in the canopy, and their broad leaf bases form a throat that holds water. These private pools are inhabited by the poison dart chaps, and the best territory is fought over bitterly! Cecropia form beautiful trees, and are a pioneer species that will often invade disturbed areas. Their stems have hollow sections within them, and these are inhabited by Azteca ants that protect the tree by attacking predators such as leaf cutter ants! Although banana leaves are quite tough and used as plates by native eggs, they are nevertheless the food plant for the spectacular Owl butterflies, huge beasts from South America that are often seen in English butterfly houses.
 
That is enough tropical prattle for now, I have caught a bug so there will be more to come!
 
The south entrance to the house! Quite futuristic to my mind, it’s surprising the Victorians took to it as warmly as they did

Sunset at the west entrance

Detailing of Turner’s ironwork on the balcony, the spinning disc foliage on the left is Cecropia glaziovii

Bambusa vulgaris has these magnificently marked stems, although the vigorous growth needs checking regularly. This is done by digging out some of the rootstock, and every other year the dense foliage is completely stripped

Aphelandra aurantiaca var. aurantiaca is one of the many flowering plants, and continues its display throughout the year

Sanchezia nobilis is an excellent foliage shrub, good for filling gaps and providing some evergreen structure

Theobroma cacao is certainly not the most beautiful tree in the Palm House, but it is one of the most interesting! The beans found in the large seed pods are the main ingredient in chocolate!

The glorious paddles of Ravenala madagascariensis

Licuala grandis and some detailing of the flowers. Palm flowers are generally small and white

Kew holds the National Collection of Musa species, this here is Musa balbisiana. Bananas are as tall as trees, but are in fact herbaceous plants and the ‘stem’ is merely the tightly packed sheaths of the enormous leaves! The male flower hangs at the end of the flowering stem, while the female flowers are further up and after pollination form the banana fruit

The larva and imago of Caligo memnon, the Owl butterfly! They lay their eggs on Musa species, and are seen here at Stratford Butterfly Farm

Alocasia x amazonica and Philodendron melanochrysum are typical of many tropical leaves, featuring a pronounced ‘drip tip’, an adaptation at the end of the leaf which enables the exceptionally large amounts of rain to drain away from the plant quickly

View from the Palm House balcony along the dramatic Syon Vista. Across the river at the end of this avenue is Syon House, the home of the Duke of Northumberland. In the foreground is the rose garden

A view from up in the canopy, and some more detailing on the pillars

Looking along the roof of the south end!

My manager Wes (Keeper of the Palm House) 16 metres up in the canopy on the ‘nifty lift’. Happy days!



Thursday, 14 March 2013

AGS Harlow Show

At this time of year the experts who meddle with miniature blooms are having their moment in the sun; revelling in their alpine gems and racing up and down the country to attend one of the many Alpine Garden Society shows. One of the first in the calendar is the Harlow Show in Essex, and last Saturday several Kew students headed up there to help out, ‘do our bit’, and assist staff from the Kew Alpine Nursery. This is the first such show I have attended, and it was dashed good fun! The highlight was undoubtedly seen in the main hall, which was resplendent with row after row of pristine alpine specimens all displayed by amateur growers and AGS members from across England. The competition is broken up into classes, such as ‘1 pan Fritillaria’ or ‘3 pans Primula’, with each exhibitor offering up their best plants for any category of their choice. The judging process takes about an hour, with a rabble of old alpine experts thrashing it out amongst themselves, and the atmosphere getting somewhat heated in the process! A truly splendid specimen of Gymnospermium albertii (see previous post) was on show, and won a ‘Certificate of Merit’ for being judged one of the most outstanding plants on display. Unfortunately I was unable to find one in the plant sales next door, but did come away with a beautiful Adonis amurensis from the chaps at Edrom Nursery. I hope you enjoy these following spring gems, and if you are interested in witnessing such splendour first-hand there are many shows left on the calendar (see here). Back to the tropics next for more Palm House glory!
 
 
The Farrer Memorial Medal for best plant in the show was won by this mass of Iris ‘Frank Elder’

Glorious variation in colour from Ranunculus calandrinioides

Hepatica japonica ‘Utyuu’

Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis ‘Tricolour’

The dainty stripes of Crocus reticulatus subsp. reticulatus

This is the Adonis amurensis, cheery blooms and fascinating foliage


Crocus x jessopiae, selected and named by the great plantsman E.A. Bowles

Heads held proud above the foliage, Crocus chrysanthus ‘Ladykiller’

Crocus malyi, crisp and elegant!

An explosion of colour and form in one pan! Crocus abantensis

Crocus minimus provided one of the best colours of the day, and the dark hints on the outer petals are a joy!

Some creative eggs displayed their gems with stone dressings. Outstanding efforts as seen here with Callianthemum anemonoides!