OK. Que up the music from Deliverance. The red hot pokers (Kniphofia uvaria) are playing out a duet yet sparring with each other. Here's their updated story.They were planted from seed about four years ago after I saw them and thought they looked really cool and different. (I'm a sucker for those botanical attributes.) Three plants took and grew and bloomed in their second year. And grew. And grew. I wrote about their first bloom two years ago [posted 26.06.2010] and the reasons I fell out of love with them:
• they bloom a very short time
• they look like a tangled mess for half the year
• they take up too much space
I moved them to a new location in the side yard last year. These things required no finesse during the transplanting, and this year, are blooming better than ever.
For The Record: • Heavy clay soil with gypsum & organic amendments • Full sun • No fertilizer • Leaves partially die back in winter • Needs lots of space Short bloom time Garden Calendar: • Blooming: salvia, calendula, nicotianas, coreopsis, cactus, eschscholzia |





They do grow in my neighbor's yard, about a 10-12 feet separation between our two side beds.
ReplyDeleteThey're fun to look at from the window but I don't miss them when they're done blooming.
Not like her peonies.
But you're right they're fun for about a week. Then again that could be said about me!
xo Jane
The hummingbirds love them, I have some planted along the lower side of the property. Different varieties bloom at different times during the growing season, have a neighbor whose bloomed well after mine.
ReplyDeleteJane,
ReplyDeleteYour blog belies your last comment.
Janet,
Wow. Hummingbirds. I wish. My tamed Wayside Flame blooms in summer.
My aunt used to have plants like this one and I kept wondering what is its name. Cool!
ReplyDelete