Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Paul, thanks for your enthusiastic comments, I would love to know more about the plants there - not all the labels were evident or maybe I just didn't connect them with the actual plant I, too, would like to know what number 23, 24 and 35 are and will try to find out unless anyone else 'visiting' can give a clue or answer? Both are extremely attractive in the way they display each flower in a arc and looked very happy 'on the rocks' [/Robin , what an amazing garden , thank you for showing it to us. There is another beautyful Alpine Garden [though on a smaller scale] to which I have climbed on a few occasions above Garmisch , Bavaria . It is the alpine offshoot of the Munich Botanic Garden . The mistery Allium looks to me very much like A. narcissiflorum .quote]
Quote from: Ragged Robin on July 09, 2009, 09:13:12 AMPaul, thanks for your enthusiastic comments, I would love to know more about the plants there - not all the labels were evident or maybe I just didn't connect them with the actual plant I, too, would like to know what number 23, 24 and 35 are and will try to find out unless anyone else 'visiting' can give a clue or answer? Both are extremely attractive in the way they display each flower in a arc and looked very happy 'on the rocks' [/Robin , what an amazing garden , thank you for showing it to us. There is another beautyful Alpine Garden [though on a smaller scale] to which I have climbed on a few occasions above Garmisch , Bavaria . It is the alpine offshoot of the Munich Botanic Garden . The mistery Allium looks to me very much like A. narcissiflorum .quote]Are Allium narcissiflorum and A. insubricum synonyms or can they be told apart? I have been told that narcissflorum has flowers that don't nod to the same degree as insubricum. Anyone know?
Really great to find a place like this that is for the people to encourage and educate rather than to make money don't you think?
Quote Really great to find a place like this that is for the people to encourage and educate rather than to make money don't you think? It most certainly is, Robin.... and that description fits the ethos of the SRGC too!!
Robin,Apologies, I have viewed the photographs several times and read the subsequent comments but failed to thank you for your excellent report. Greatly enjoyed it. The whole concept of the garden is wonderful. Last July we visited Wengen and visited a similar garden near there. My only regret was that it hadn't been the first place I had visited as it gave a great start to days walking in the mountains, a great introduction to the plants to be seen - and all labelled, making subsequent days out all the more informative and enjoyable.As above, I think the allium is A. narcissiflorum, a lovely plant.Great report!Paddy
Glad you enjoyed the visit,Cohan, I felt as if everyone was there whilst going round and was looking for plants that I thought might be of interest.The Alpine garden has a pretty natural feel to the layout and formation of the gardens which I particularly liked - nothing forced looking and everything blending in and asking one to explore. The main planting is medicinal and the students from Lausanne university use it a lot for research. Really great to find a place like this that is for the people to encourage and educate rather than to make money don't you think? It's 50 mins drive towards Lausanne from Martigny
Well i was going to say it was a Moltkia- but then I saw the sign behind it
This plant is a delight. A rare species from the mountains of the Balkans, it is a dwarf sub-shrub, a neat woody bush with the entire plant covered with silky hairs. Not only are the flowers gorgeous, tubular in shape, opening pinkish-blue and becoming deep violet-blue and produced in abundant dense colours, but they bloom from spring well into summer, if not to September. Quite easy to grow in any reasonable soil, it is particularly partial to sunny crevices in rockwork. 12-18 ins.