|
Articles
Articles for publication
For something like twenty years now I have written easy
to read botanical articles that have been published in magazines,
newsletters and bulletins of various societies. If you feel that
your group/society/ club etc. may benefit from such articles please
contact me. My fees are reasonable.
- In May 2001 I finished writing a book on western North
American alpines. It features some 54 genera, including all the
popular ones, around 500 photos and several maps. Cultivation
and propagation techniques have been included within each chapter
as well as an individual cultivation chapter. The title is "Alpine Plants of North America"
and is described by Timber Press as an Encyclopedia of Mountain
Flowers from the Rockies to Alaska.
- It was published in late 2002 and
details can be seen on the home page of this web site.
Below are two illustrations of my work. Both are copyright
and all enquiries for reprodution in any part or whole must be
made to me.
-
FIVE
CHOICE EUROPEAN CAMPANULAS
- I grow all the western North American Campanula species,
mostly in pots and with varying degrees of success, but I also
grow many European species. Some of these are not just suitable
for exhibition but also grow quite happily outdoors in an alpine
raised bed or trough. Wearing my nurseryman's hat, I have to
be able to propagate them-sometimes in large numbers, since they
are very popular. By "popular," I don't mean that the
average customer stopping at my sales table would necessarily
buy one of these species; it's the grower looking for something
a little out of the ordinary who picks up one of these plants
with a cry of delight and thrusts money into my hand. I take
pride in being the only mail-order nursery grower in the United
Kingdom presently offering these campanulas.
Campanula choruhensisis is a species that some of you may already
have. It's a wonderful plant and easy to grow--almost as easy
as the closely related C. betulaefolia. The leaves are deep green
and hairy, and its white flowers, sometimes flushed with pink,
can be huge. Plants vary in growth habit: some have a number
of fairly short stems branching off and hanging down, carrying
clusters of as many as 6 flowers; others grow upright, with the
bells massed together in a huge bunch. Unfortunately, though
they look well in pots, in the alpine bed the flowers that hang
down tend to be spoiled by dragging on the ground. In her 1993
Rocky Mountain Rare Plants seed catalog, Gwen Kelaidis described
this species as "sensational," and she wasn't kidding.
At the AGS Summer Show South in 1997, both my plant and one grown
by another member of the Wiltshire AGS group were awarded a Preliminary
Commendation by the Royal Horticultural Society Joint Rock Garden
Plant Committee, and a note on this campanula appeared in the
Quarterly Bulletin of the Alpine Garden Society (65.4:434-435,
Dec. 1997).
My original plants were grown from seed purchased from that catalog,
soon after C. choruhensis was described. Josef Halda collected
it at that time, and a year later another Czech seed collector,
Vaclav Holubec, also started to list this species. It comes from
Tortum and Kargapazari Dag in Turkey, where it inhabits rotten
schist and volcanic rock crevices at elevations around 2000 meters
(6500 feet); it loves a cool northern exposure.
Propagation is straightforward by seed, which is quite abundantly
set most years. Like most campanula seed, it is very fine and
must be collected from the base of the dried capsules before
it is dispersed to the four winds. Sow your seed thinly, or you
will end up with masses of seedlings which just love to damp
off. I sow mine on the surface of a pot of compost topped with
grit, which allows it plenty of light to speed germination. Seed-grown
plants vary in growth habit from upright to drooping, and leaf
size may also vary; nevertheless, so far all my seed-sown mature
plants have the large flowers of their parents. If you have a
particularly nice specimen that you want to duplicate, you can
take cuttings in spring when the new shoots are growing vigorously.
Campanula choruhensis grows well in a range of soils despite
the rigors of its native habitat. After flowering in May or June,
the stems die back in autumn to a central rootstock, and during
winter plants growing outside look quite bare. In the alpine
house, however, plants usually have a little green showing.
Campanula hercegovina 'Nana' is
an absolute gem for a trough. The small, bell-shaped, deep lilac
flowers are borne on slender, decumbent stems 7-10 cm (3-4 in.)
long. These stems are branched and arise from a woody rhizome.
The plant slowly forms a clump, never becoming invasive. It dies
back in winter and reappears in late spring. Flowering is from
late May to June and sometimes continues sporadically into autumn,
especially in the alpine house or coldframe. It is a very easy
plant to grow, either in an alpine bed or in a trough. In the
wild, C. hercegovina inhabits limestone crevices and cliffs in
Bosnia-Hercegovina.
I inherited my original plant in 1990 from a nursery that was
going out of business at the same time as I was starting up,
and it is still going strong in one of my raised beds, now about
15 cm (6 in.) across. Propagation is very easy: literally pull
the plant apart and pot up the rooted pieces. This can be done
from the time the new shoots appear above ground in spring right
through the growing season until early autumn. In the nursery,
it is far easier to grow half a dozen plants in plastic pots
and use them for propagation stock than it is to keep digging
up the garden specimen. In this way I can divide the stock plants
at least three times in one year. I have never found any seed
in the capsules, but several self-sown seedlings have appeared
in pots where sale plants had been kept in the alpine house.
These grew very quickly, flowering and filling a 7-cm-square
(3-in.) pot in the first season.
My third choice, Campanula jaubertiana, is a lovely, free-flowering,
vigorous species which has intense violet-blue flowers on stems
to 12.5 cm (5 in.) tall. (A photograph of it also appears in
the Quarterly Bulletin of the Alpine Garden Society 63.4:379,
Dec. 1995.) This is another ideal plant for the trough, if you
can keep the slugs at bay. It also revels in growing in pots,
and in the UK it is often exhibited at the summer shows.
-
- Photo Robert Rolfe
-
- I obtained my first plant of C. jaubertiana in summer
1994 as a swap after I saw it exhibited. From that one plant,
I have since produced more than 100 plants for the nursery, and
the original is still good enough to exhibit. Although the species
was described as long ago as 1868, at the time I obtained my
plant it had just been reintroduced to cultivation. It is another
a limestone-dweller, this
- time from the screes and rock crevices of the
- central Pyrenees at over 2000 metres (6500 feet) elevation.
There are reports that it also grows in isolated sites on the
high southern slopes of the foothills of the Spanish Pyrenees
and at one station in Andorra; at the latter it is identified
as Campanula jaubertiana subsp. andorrana. Although in the wild
it normally flowers from July to August, in cultivation it blooms
about a month earlier.
Propagating C. jaubertiana is even easier than increasing C.
hercegovina. In fact, it just cries out to be split up. Very
vigorous, it dies back in winter, even in an alpine house. It
comes into growth very early in spring, and at that time I knock
the previous year's unsold plants out of their pots and pull
them to pieces, using scissors to cut off any piece of stem that
has a root on it. All pieces are then repotted and put into a
coldframe. The larger pieces quickly grow to a size for planting
out, usually by late spring, and the smaller pieces later the
same year. Right up to October, whenever any unsold plants show
tufts of new growth around the edges, I divide them in the same
way, so I am never without this jewel. My plants have never set
seed, and I have not heard of other plants doing so either.
Cultivation of C. jaubertiana is simple in a scree or a raised
bed with very gritty soil, with some shade on hot summer days.
In winter, outdoor plants usually disappear below ground, but
those in the alpine house stay green and break into growth earlier.
With alpine-house specimens, it is best to clip over the stems
in fall, removing the spent flowerheads and any stems that appear
dead. A gritty compost with lime in it suits this plant down
to the ground. Slugs are the worst problem it encounters. If
you haven't grown this plant yet, then give it a go!
Some years ago I was browsing over a nurseryman's sales table
and spotted a campanula I didn't know much about: Campanula petrophila.
It looked promising, and anything unknown is worth a try. This
has turned out to be another wonderful species for the garden.
It comes from the Caucasus, where it grows in cool rock crevices
at around 3600 meters (11,700 feet), forming tight clumps of
small, ovate basal leaves that are sometimes toothed. The stems
are prostrate, to 10 cm (4 in.) long, and carry clusters of large,
blue-purple, bell-shaped flowers.

If you grow C. petrophila under glass, as I did at first, you
will find that the stems elongate and the charming compactness
is lost; but put it outside in a trough, gritty alpine bed, or
sand bed, and it becomes a wonderful alpine bellflower. As soon
as it got into one of my alpine beds, a dramatic change took
place. As you can see from the photo, it made a tight clump with
huge, almost stemless blue-purple bells.
This is not one of those beautiful plants that flower once and
die with no possibility of propagation. In spring or fall, dig
it up, remove rooted pieces, and pot them up. If you do this
in spring, you will have a small potful by fall, ready to split
again. There has to be a downside, though, and once again it's
the slug problem. Nevertheless, C. petrophila increases quickly
enough to keep it going in several places around the garden,
and it's certainly worth the trouble.
Finally, the choicest of these five gems: Campanula zoysii, the
campanula that is always mentioned by rock garden writers and
speakers discussing campanulas for troughs. (I always suspect
that the majority of these people have never grown the plant
and are just cribbing from other authorities, but perhaps I'm
wrong.) I grow a clone of C. zoysii which-luckily for me-is vigorous
and free-flowering. 
Campanula zoysii comes from the southeastern European Alps, where
it grows among limestone rocks. Its unique and lovely flowers
are crimped at the mouth, making it very difficult for bees to
enter. Last year (and by good fortune, after the shows), I noticed
two different types of bees flying around my plant: a small one
that burrowed into the closed end of the flowers to obtain the
pollen, and a very large one that must have thought "To
hell with all that!" and just drilled a hole straight through
each flower. Half an hour later, all the flowers on my plant
possessed an extra hole. No seed was set, which made it a pointless
exercise as far as I was concerned.
-
Having whetted your appetite for
the typical C. zoysii, I'll tell you about one I obtained in
exchange for Androsace bryomorpha. It is a white form with the
clonal name 'Lismore Ice'. This plant was raised by the nurseryman
Brian Burrow from wild-collected seed from the Julian Alps distributed
through the AGS seed exchange (don't look so amazed!) about 13
years ago. It's an exquisite plant, documented in a photograph
in the Quarterly Bulletin of the Alpine Garden Society (57.1:82,
Mar. 1989). Much more compact than the usual blue form, it also
has much smaller leaves. The tips of the leaves are slightly
yellow, but this is a natural characteristic of the plant and
not, as some writers have said, a sign of chlorosis. I have yet
to grow this plant in a trough open to all the ravages of the
weather and slugs, but I have no doubt that it would be fine
outside, provided ravening mollusks were kept at a distance.
Like the blue form, it increases by underground runners.
Propagation of these forms of C. zoysii is easy, either by cuttings
in spring or as described above for other campanulas with underground
runners. When shoots appear around the edge of the plant, don't
be frightened of it; take it out of its pot and remove any rooted
pieces, potting them up as described above. The white form is
much slower to increase than the blue and takes longer to build
up into a large plant. It seems that continual disturbance and
a deep top-dressing of grit encourage it to survive and produce
side shoots. From the small plant I obtained in 1995, I had propagated
enough plants two years later to list 'Lismore Ice' in my autumn
catalog. If it hadn't been for that swap, 'Lismore Ice' might
have been lost entirely; as far as I know, that plant was the
only one in existence. It was gratifying when I was able to return
one to Brian Burrow, the original raiser. This is what conservation
is all about. It has now become more widely available.
The blue form of C. zoysii builds up over about three years into
a power-packed plant that blooms tremendously, hardly any rosette
without a flowering stem. Unfortunately, after flowering, these
stems and their rosettes die back, sometimes resulting in the
death of the entire plant. You must make it a priority to propagate
C. zoysii before this happens so that you have smaller plants
coming on to replace the "big one"-which inevitably
dies.
-
- This article appeared in the North American Rock Garden
Society 'Rock Garden Quarterly' Spring 2001. Volume 59 No.2
-
-
-
- JUST ONE MORE
In the late 70's that well known seed collector John Watson issued
a list of seed from his Turkey expedition. Of the Campanula seed
that I bought from him, Campanula ledebouriana proved
to be a superb plant. It eventually earned me a Certificate of
Merit at one of the AGS shows. `Murphy's Law' being what it is
however, the plant promptly died without me ever having propagated
it. You can imagine my excitement when I spotted in Josef Halda's
91-92 list Campanula ledebouriana pulvinata was
being offered. This was described as 'a little known cushion
Campanula'. It certainly was, and luckily up to now, still is.
(Murphy's Law will now grind into motion). I grew it in a pot
for several years hoping that it would make a good show plant.
Here it just about survived and last year decided it had to take
it's chance outside. Imagine my delight that within a month of
planting it out in a gritty limestone bed, it became a tight
mound 8 cms across that flowered in early summer with very large
violet blooms on just 5 cm stems. It must be the best cushion
Campanula that I have ever grown. Now for the (almost) bad news.
I turned my back one day in September and a slug chewed all the
flowers, shoots and leaves to within 2 cms of the ground. It
now once again resides in a pot in the alpine house where at
present it is imitating a bunch of green/brown stems. In the
wild it does not inhabit slug ridden gardens but grows in the
Sevan range, little Caucasus, C.Armenia at around 3,200m.
Although I grew this plant from seed I had no chance to see if
seed had been set for me due to the earlier visitor. However,
I think that the best way to propagate it is cuttings in early
spring. It grows from a tap root and I couldn't find any rooted
shoots when I dug it up. It appeared to be extremely happy in
my limey soil and I am only hoping that I can propagate it enough
to distribute the fantastic cushion plant, Campanula ledebouriana
pulvinata amongst my good grower friends.
PROPAGATION
FROM THE NURSERYMAN'S POINT OF VIEW
As a plantsman, I like to grow, exhibit and propagate
unusual plants, yet as a nurseryman, I have to produce as many
plants as possible in order to make a profit. Combining these
two goals can make life very interesting. If I have only one plant
of a rare species, then I consider that I have a duty to propagate
and distribute it, if only to keep it in cultivation. From the
profit angle however, I may as well produce as many plants as
possible at the same time.
Underground Shoot Cuttings
Many of my stock plants are also show plants and occasionally
there is a clash of interests between keeping a plant up to exhibition
standard and propagating it for sale. In
some cases, satisfactory cuttings can be taken from the edge of
the plant. In others, such as Campanula piperi, C.zoizii, C.shetleri,
and C."Joe Elliot", underground growth with roots attached
can be used as cutting material.
Early Tip Cuttings
Many other plants are not so easy to propagate. Take,
for example, that lovely shrubby viola from the Sierra de Cazorla
in Spain, Viola cazorlensis. Thin stems with tiny leaves rise
up about 4" and are topped with huge, pink-purple, long-spurred
flowers. Although my plant has set seed on two occasions, there
has never been any germination. Propagation therefore has had
to be carried out vegetatively. All cuttings root very easily
in sand and grow on well when taken as early as possible after
growth commences in the spring. This enables new plants to have
a long growing season and make a good root system before they
go dormant. If you miss the first growth and take cuttings later
in the year, they will root and grow but you will be disappointed
the following spring when nothing emerges, the roots having died
off in winter. Taking cuttings from the first growth produces
a bonus, encouraging the plant to break out from the base bearing
far more flowering stems, resulting in a much showier exhibition
plant.
Another case in which taking early cuttings improves flowering
of the stock plant is the Mexican phloxes. When I obtained my
first cultivar, Phlox mesoleuca 'Mary Maslin', the only method
recommended was root cuttings. However, I tried cuttings in sand
from the first growth with great success, and the plant flowered
profusely later. Now, all my Mexican phloxes are increased by
that method. I do find that accidental root cuttings help with
this group of plants. Where pots of stock plants are stood on
damp sand during the season, sometimes green shoots appear out
of the sand as the plants root down from the bottom of the pot
and produce lateral shoots. These are gently removed from the
sand and potted up.
Crown-and-Root Division
I have had one plant of Lewisia stebbinsii for twelve
years (grown from ARGS seed sown in 1982). It has flowered well
for me the last 5 years but has never set seed. How could I increase
my stock? Seed from various exchanges, although listed as L.stebbinsii,
usually turned out to be Lewisia longipetala. This year I tried
a different, but simple method, that I had been using successfully
in propagating good forms of Lewisia rediviva. In L. rediviva,
I cut off the growing point in early spring, and then wait a year
for new growing points to emerge from the caudex rim. The caudex
and root are then sliced lengthways. Each piece with a growing
point is treated with rooting powder or fungicide and inserted
as a cutting. Once rooted, they can be potted up. My plant of
L.stebbinsii, had made quite a wide carrot- like caudex with still
only two shoots after a decade. In the autumn as these shoots
started to grow, I took a deep breath, and a sharp knife, and
cut the caudex and root lengthways. I treated the resultant raw
root with hormone powder and potted up both pieces. They are now
growing well. Although these plants are the same clone and possibly
will still not set viable seed, I will not have any fears of dividing
them again in the future.
Rhizome cuttings
A new corydalis is on the scene. Corydalis flexuosa,
from China, is one of those plants that is a nurseryman's dream.
It has beautiful blue flowers, grows at terrific speed and is
propagated easily. Although it is normally grown in a leafy soil,
put it into a sandy compost for propagation purposes. The plant
appears to grow twelve months of the year, but it does slow down
around July. Then the plant can be either dug up or knocked out
of it's pot to uncover the horizontal rhizomes. Break these into
small pieces and pot them up. Growth will soon restart, and in
no time fresh fernlike foliage will appear above the surface,
to flower next year.
Cuttings or Whole Seed Capsule
A New Zealand forgetmenot, Myosotis uniflora, forms
a lovely dome with stemless, yellow flowers. It is reasonably
straightforward in cultivation, as long as it is grown in very
gritty compost. Sometimes this plant is shy to flower or to set
seed. When it does, the job of prising seed out of the capsules
hidden in the foliage can be very frustrating. Several years ago,
with no seed available, I thought "nothing ventured, nothing
gained" and took twelve cuttings, inserting them into sand.
Although it was June, every one rooted, and by the following spring
were of a saleable size. I contacted my New Zealand pen-pal with
this information and she replied that this hadn't been tried at
her local alpine nursery, in spite of it being a native plant
and very much sought after. It had been assumed that cuttings
would not take. Joe Cartman, in his book "Growing New Zealand
Alpine Plants", said that this plant was easy to propagate,
but it appears that seed, when available, had been the usual method.
The ironic thing this year is that I sowed a number of seed capsules
whole, as I could not retrieve any seed from my plant. Germination
has been like mustard and cress. Each capsule must have held 3
or 4 seeds and the surface of a 6" pot is thick with seedlings.
Potted on early, these grow on over the winter to form saleable
plants by late spring.
The Carrot Shoot Trick
No doubt many of you grow Erigeron aureus "Canary
Bird", but any seed that you sow from it will not produce
dozens of "Canary Birds". This plant does not provide
much cutting material each year either. I was given a tip from
another nurseyman : In early spring, when growth is starting,
take a sharp knife and be ruthless. Cut straight across, just
at the top of the caudex - try it on a carrot first. After a few
weeks, new growth will start from the edge of the caudex. A great
many more shoots will appear than were previously growing and
when long enough can be used for cuttings.
-
- These are just a few suggestions that may enable you
to increase your stock of unusual plants. I pray that no nurserymen
are now reaching for the telephone to contact their lawyers,
considering that I have given out trade secrets for free.
-
- What Works with Convolvulus?
-
-
- In the original
article I finished with the following plea.
-
- "Now can someone give me advice? Convolvulus
boissieri, another Spanish species, is a wonderful silver mat
forming plant with large almost stemless, white funnel-shaped
flowers. I have tried over many years to produce an adequate
number of plants to sell when taking cuttings. I have taken cuttings
in spring and all have died off. I have tried bottom heat with
no success. Cuttings taken in autumn have rooted after 9 months,
but even then with only 25% success. Can anyone improve on this?
I would love to make it available in larger quantities."
-
- Since then I have found that layering works a treat,
not only this plant but others. Phloxes and Arenarias for example
can be quickly increased by layering.It does take a season or
so for rooting to take place but the rooted pieces are larger
than normal cuttings. If growing in a pot just knock it out and
repot it lower than it was originally. Top dress with a gritty
mix and grow on as normal. many of the sides shoots now under
the top dressing will root and can be removed and potted on after
about a year. If the plant is growing in the garden, work the
gritty mix in and over the side shoots. Rooting wil take place
in exactly the same way. In fact by just examining the outside
shoots before you cover them you may find some rooted pieces
anyway.
-
- Spring 1994 NARGS Bulletin Volume
52 No.2
- Updated 19th November 1999

|