I admit to being a bit lazy about weeding – but sometimes I deliberately leave a weed seedling to see what develops, and occasionally it’s worth it.
The edge of the gravel drive usually has a good number of
‘unintentional’ plants seeded into it. A
few are desirable – nigella and parsley, from plantings in the adjacent bed –
but a lot are not. There’s a good number
of out-and-out weeds, but also a few buddleja plantlets. My buddleja is a big old thing, with flowers
in a reasonably good purple-blue, though there are better modern cultivars and
I’m not inclined to propagate this one, even though it seeds itself quite a lot
in this garden - I use the old seedheads and prunings in the compost bins and
plants germinate from that. Recently
quite a large buddleja plant appeared in the gravel, and I haven’t bothered to
pull it up – in the hope that it might flower, and (irrationally) turn out to
be a better colour than the existing plant.
White buddleja |
It has indeed flowered – and it’s white! Probably a seedling of next door’s white buddleja plant. I’m hoping that it might be transplantable, with a little care; most weeds in the gravel don’t have deep roots, and there’s no obvious reason why this would be any different. I’ll leave it until the late autumn and try to move it then; with a lot of watering and decent conditions, it might survive. Then I need to decide where to put it (not many good places for it …)!
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Panicum flowerhead |
Another ‘unintentional’ plant is in the pot with Hosta ‘Krossa Regal’. At first it looked rather like the young hosta leaves, and I paid it little attention, but as it developed I realised that it’s a grass. Not just any grass; it has broad, chunky leaves. A panicum seedling. The only panicum that I’ve had in the garden is one of the cultivars with an explosion of little seedheads, rather like a miniature firework, which looks good in flower arrangements, so I left it alone. The first flower-head went into a little vase with some dahlia flowers and a few sprigs of Dianthus ‘Siberian Blues’ (which is actually pink …), and it looked good on the table for a celebratory weekend!
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