2019-07-13_Amateur_Gardening

(Michael S) #1
20 AMATEUR GARDENING 13 JULY 2019

Corydalis

If you want bright, colourful flowers on neat mounds of foliage then corydalis is ideal.
Anne Swithinbank looks at some common varieties that provide good groundcover

S


HOULD you move into a place
with an established but slightly
overgrown garden, it is possible
that while you are clearing the
groundcover you might encounter a
clump of fine, ferny foliage, joined by
quirky-looking tubular flowers with short
or long spurs. These plants belong to
the genus corydalis, and they have

inspired a variety of descriptions,
including snapdragons, nests of baby
birds, shoals of fish or even tadpoles.
They are also known as fumitories or
fumeworts, and are members of the
poppy family, Papaveraceae.

Mix and match
There are 400 species of corydalis, but
only a few are used regularly as garden
plants. Commonest is the yellow fumitory
(C. lutea), native to the European alpine
regions. From spring to late summer,
short-spurred, canary-yellow flowers
will open against evergreen foliage
that reaches a height of 16in (40cm).
Their ability to seed with abandon
can be viewed as a crime or an asset,
depending on your style of gardening.
Plants will spring up from walls and
mingle with other plants, thriving in
well-drained but moist soil in semi-shade.
I would harness its fragile looks to knit
spaces between plants and complement
larger-leaved hostas and ligularias. If you

prefer cream flowers, C. ochroleuca is
similar but a little shorter at 12in (30cm).
In our garden, we were delighted to
come across smaller C. solida, as its
grey-green leaves are a perfect foil for a
spring show of dusky-pink flowers. Like
cream-flowered C. malkensis, this group
dies back to a tuberous rootstock during
the heat of summer, so be careful not to
uproot plants accidentally while weeding
and planting. They grow well with spring-
flowering bulbs and naturalise in turf.
Some of the showiest fumitories are
those derived from Chinese C. flexuosa
and other blue-flowered species such
as C. elata (a good garden blue) and
C. cashmeriana. With names such as
‘Kingfisher’, ‘Blue Dragon’ and ‘China
Blue’, their long-spurred azure flowers
have set many hearts aflutter, but the
plants need some pampering to thrive.
After flowering in May and June, some
will go dormant in summer; they need
a good humus-rich but well-drained
soil and react well to regular division.

How to grow...


C. ochroleuca has cream fl owers and
grows to a height of 12in (30cm)

All photography Alamy, unless otherwise credited


Corydalis

I will plant my new blue-fl owered
corydalis into an alpine sink, where
good drainage is guaranteed and
I can keep an eye on them

Yellow fumitory (Corydalis lutea) sets seed with
abandon – and once established it’s a real keeper

Corydalis with tuberous
rootstocks, whose growth
dies back in summer, can
be easily uprooted by mistake.
A good plan is to mark
their position by mulching
with pale-coloured grit.

Corydalis
can be used
to fi ll the
spaces
between
plants such
as hostas
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