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Re: Crocosmia or Chasmanthe?
- To: M*@ucdavis.edu
- Subject: Re: Crocosmia or Chasmanthe?
- From: "* K* <g*@hba.trumpet.com.au>
- Date: Tue, 25 Feb 1997 12:23:46 +0000
I have never heard of chasmanthe. Am replying to also warn about
Crocossmia. In the Channel area [counrty garden] Crocosmia, which is
in flower now, has become an absolute pest. Grows all along
roadside and appears everywhere in our gardens. Middleton was very
badly burnt in Tasmania's worst bush fires [Feb. 1967] and these
corms must have quite liked the burning treatment. Watsonias
[mainly the magenta-purple ones, a few white, have also spread
through vacant areas. I dug up a few plants, from hundreds growing
beside the roadside, and I mean hundreds, thinking they were
white Watsonias, and now have an orange- pink bugle flower plant
growing rapidly through the garden. The leaves are much wider than
the Crocoosmia, plant much taller and it forms little bulbets all along
the flowering stem that drop off when you touch them and appear to be
ready to flower the following summer. Another pest!
A casual description would be a cross between Watsonias, Crocosmia
and with Gladiolus like corms. I thought I had got it named but as
I have written, can't find Chasmanthe in any of my books.
Regards
Gay Klok: my net address, one page leads to another,
http://members.tripod.com/~klok/WRINKLY_.HTM
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