Re: Large leaved
- Subject: Re: Large leaved
- From: Rowan Adams r*@quickbeam.plus.com
- Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 11:23:00 +0000
Thanks Carol - the international wonders of Amazon!
On Friday, Feb 25, 2005, at 23:27 Europe/London, Joynson, Carol wrote:
There's a very useful book, A Weaver's Garden: Growing Plants for Natural Dyes and Fibers<image.tiff>
by Rita Buchanan
I don't remember if she mentions Sparmannia specifically, but I'll bet she has notes if you can manage to contact her.
From: owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu [mailto:owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu] On Behalf Of Rowan Adams
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2005 3:12 PM
To: medit-plants@ucdavis.edu
Subject: Re: Large leaved
Just looked Sparmannia up in Graham Payne's book - it looks good, and I'd like to try it.
He says it's in the Tiliaceae, so I wondered if the flowers are as scented as those on lime trees? He also gives the common name as African hemp - anybody know about using its fibres?
Thanks,
Rowan Adams
Ventnor, Isle of Wight, Britain.
On Friday, Feb 25, 2005, at 16:50 Europe/London, Bill Grant wrote:
Sparmannia africana has very large leaves. Once in thirty years during a freeze it died back to the ground but rebounded quickly. The loveliest small flowers. And it never gets watered or fertilized. Bill Grant
- References:
- RE: Large leaved
- From: "J* C*"
- From: "J* C*"
- RE: Large leaved
- Prev by Date: Large leaf plants
- Next by Date: Sparmannia part 2
- Previous by thread: RE: Large leaved
- Next by thread: Large leaf plants