RE: Echiums
- Subject: RE: Echiums
- From: Joe Seals g*@yahoo.com
- Date: Thu, 17 Mar 2005 11:17:37 -0800 (PST)
You're absolutely correct Joyce.
Echium wildpretii, the tower-of-jewels, is definitely a biennial or short-lived monocarpic perennial.
And Echium pinniana is described as a "short-lived" shrub.
I guess I was assuming the common Echium, E. candicans (formerly E. fastuosum).
Joe
"Joynson, Carol" <carol.joynson@medtronic.com> wrote:
"Joynson, Carol" <carol.joynson@medtronic.com> wrote:
Um, aren't some echiums biennial, not perennial?
From: owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu [mailto:owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu] On Behalf Of Joe Seals
Sent: Thursday, March 17, 2005 10:55 AM
To: pamela@nznf.co.uk; Medit-Plants
Subject: Re: EchiumsPamela:I know that Echiums are relatively short-lived but two years is an exaggeration. I've seen plants upwards of 20 years old.They do get kind of scruffy, though, and maybe some gardeners remove them simply due to their unkempt look.I wouldn't remove one until it either died outright or it looked beyond ugliness repair.Joe
Pamela Steele <pamela@nznf.co.uk> wrote:Is it true that I will have to repalce my newly planted Echiums after 2 years? I have been told today that the fizzle out after two years?? eeek I hope not!Pamela
Joe Seals
Santa Maria, California --
where the weather is always perfect
and my NEW garden will soon be blooming and full of birds and butterflies
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Joe Seals
Santa Maria, California --
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