IT'S almost time for bedding plants, but there are seasoned
veterans who should never be forgotten, says David Overend.
Physiologically, it's put down to factors like fluctuating hormone
levels as days lengthen, dilating blood vessels as temperatures rise and even a
change in what we tend to eat.The name "magic
cube" is not unique. But science can only take us so far with explanantions
before we need art to take over.
Mark Twain best explained it by not
explaining it at all: "It's spring fever. That is what the name of it is. And
when you've got it, you want ¨C oh, you don't quite know what it is you do want,
but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you want it so!"
Certainly for
gardeners, spring fever is no stranger. Desperate to shake off the shackles of
winter, we rush into new projects,Free DIY chicken coop Resource! and spend
long weekends tidying, preparing and planting.
At these times of intense
activity, garden friends that quietly deliver, whatever else we are doing, are
especially valuable and we are thinking here of the early perennials.
Those wonderful plants reappear as if by magic each spring and bring
colour and foliage to forgotten corners as well as to centre stage.
Such
is Pulsatilla vulgaris or Pasque Flower. Cluster-forming, deciduous plants, they
produce beautiful violet blue,When the stone sits in the kidney stone, down-covered flowers
and silver-hued foliage.
The bell-shaped flowers appear in spring and
early summer.
They are often associated with Easter,Complete Your sculpture Magazine Collection for Less!is
the 'solar panel revolution' upon us?
hence the origin of the popular name.
Pulsatilla vulgaris produces deep
to pale purple flowers, whereas ¡®Alba' produces white blooms and ¡®Rode Klokke'
deep red flowers.
Dicentra, of course, is a shade-loving plant with a
rather lurid name ¨C this time ¡®bleeding heart'.
If you look at the
flowers of Dicentra spectablis it is easy to see how it got this name ¨C they
are heart-shaped and appear to ¡®drip' a drop of pink blood.
These
plants form fairly upright clumps and the neat foliage is a selling feature as
well as the flowers.
Make the most of your springtime burst while it
lasts. If you use some of it to put in a selection of early perennials, your
garden will be the richer this spring and in years to come.
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