2019-07-13_Amateur_Gardening

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

Pick of the very best


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Graham Rice chooses his six top RHS Award of Garden Merit winners


Colchicums


This week it’s


When is a crocus not a crocus? When it’s a colchicum, of course! Graham unmasks
autumn’s great pretenders and shares his six favourites from the AGM winners

Plant white-fl owered C. speciosum ‘Album’ in borders
with silver-foliaged plants like Helichrysum petiolare
‘Variegatum’ for a touch of autumn magic

Kevock Garden Plants kevockgarden.co.uk 0131 454 0660
Pottertons Nursery pottertons.co.uk 01472 851714
RV Roger rvroger.co.uk 01751 472226

Where to buy


O


K, what’s the difference
between a crocus and an
autumn crocus? Actually, it’s
kind of a trick question, as
there are both spring- and autumn-
flowering species of the true crocus,
while what we usually refer to as the
‘autumn crocus’ is a different plant
altogether: the colchicum.
Colchicums are related to lilies. The
flowers develop from fat corms, with up
to a dozen large and showy blooms in
pinks, lavenders and white, each with
six stamens. Mostly, the flowers open
in autumn and are followed by bold
strap-like leaves in spring. Colchicums
are also very poisonous.

Crocuses are related to irises. They
develop from smaller corms – rounded
with neat points – and in autumn or spring
produce fewer and daintier flowers, with
three stamens. These blooms, which
come in a wide variety of colours, are
followed by slender, unobtrusive foliage.

Big impact
Colchicums tend to prefer richer soils
and more moisture than crocuses, their
colour range is more limited, and while
their impact is often more dramatic, their
foliage is far more noticeable. They
invariably flower with no leaves – hence
they’re sometimes called naked ladies.
Some smaller-flowered colchicums

are collectors’ plants, best grown in
pots in a cold greenhouse; but most
are robust and happy in the rough and
tumble of borders, where one of the
most striking features is the number of
flowers that emerge from a single corm.
This can be up to a dozen in some cases,
and all on long, slender stems – it makes
an impressive show, especially when the
corms start to multiply tightly.
The key point is to ensure that the
flowers are not smothered at flowering
time, and that the large leaves that
develop in spring are hidden, at least
partly, by nearby foliage.
Naturalising colchicums in grass
works very well: the flowering meadow
will mask the foliage, and you can get the
mower out when the leaves have died
away – but before the flowers emerge.
July is usually about the right time.
In borders, colchicums work well with
vincas, ivy or epimediums. Their showy
flowers will emerge through these low

All photography Alamy and TI Media All parts of colchicums
are toxic, especially when
ingested, so it’s wise to wear
gloves when handling them.
Extracts are used in the
production of a wide
variety of medicines.

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