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Feijoa sellowiana - looking a bit tatty as the flowers are going over very quickly
Also Eucryphia is the source of the wonderful leatherwood honey from Tasmania.
Edit by Maggi: This quote is a compilation from another thread to introduce some posts which I will move here.....Quote from: Paddy TobinQuote from: alpinesIt's definitely Aruncus dioicus ...grows all over Kentucky too.Grows in Ireland too but behaves itself well. Peculiarly, my wife likes the flowers as they fade to a rusty brown, something I cannot understand and I am under strict instructions not to cut them off each year.Paddy------------------------------------------------------------I think I do understand, it is a plant that is gracefully senescent when passing out of flower. It reminds me somewhat of Eremurus stenophyllus... where I really liked the effect of the bright yellow flowers going over to complimentary brown.Mark McDonoughMassachusetts, USA, near the New Hampshire border, USDA Zone 5 ------------------------------------------------------While I harbour a wish to grow old as disgracefully as possible myself, I have certain sympathies with plants that achieve that with some grace..... I draw your attention to a thread in the NARGS Forum (McMark knows it, already, of course) on the subject.... "Senescent with dignity! "http://nargs.org/smf/index.php?topic=336.0Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 8a-----------------------------------------------Mary regularly describes plants/flowers as "dies well" or "dies badly". She has promised me a good bottle of wine and the choicest spot on the compost heap when my time comes. Paddy
When I first moved to the mild Pacific Northwest (Seattle Washington area) in the early 1980s, one of my greatest disillusions was with Camellia,