East Ruston Garden
?1
Chard Stem
Gourd
?2
Castor Oil Plant (Ricinus communis)
Cosmos sulphureus
Devil's Tobacco (Lobelia tupa)
Persicaria orientalis?
Ornamental Ginger (Hedychium aurantiacum)
Marigold (Tagetes)
Dahlia "Tahoma Star'
Dahlia variety
Griselina littoralis
A
New Zealand broadleaf
A dioecious tree
Impatiens Sp?
Glory Bush (Tibouchina urvilleana)
from
Brazil
Devil's Walking Stick, Hercules Club, Prickly Ash, Angelica Tree (Aralia spinosa)?
USA
Shrubby St John's Wort (Hypericum aegypticum)
Yoke-leaved Amicia (Amicia zygomeris)
from
Mexico
Largely hardy in the UK down to -10°C
?3
Aster Sp?
Fuschia arborescens
Yellow Angels Trumpet Plant (Brugmansia suaveolens)
Red Buffalo Bur (Solanum sisymbriifolium)
From
Norfolk Flora Group
S. sisymbriifolia Red Buffalo-bur. A native of South America and widely naturalized elsewhere. It is an erect or scrambling annual herb,
found on cultivated ground and in waste places. It arose predominantly from wool shoddy, but latterly has been introduced with oil-seed,
bird-seed and agricultural seed. It was first grown in Britain in 1815 and was first recorded in the wild in 1893 (Bournemouth, South Hampshire).
It appears to have declined following the cessation of using wool shoddy as a manure, but may reemerge as a result of its potential use in killing
potato nematodes (see S. scabrum above). I saw it as a field crop near Southrepps (centred on TG264372) in 2022, though this has been
followed by sugar beet in ’23, rather than potatoes.
?4
?5
?6
?7
?8
Great Honey Flower (Melanthus major)
South Africa
from
Beth Chatto
For a hot dry garden. Can regrow from the its woody base if caught by the cold.
?9
Hanworth
Clematis marmoria
Something bought from an AGS show some years ago but the name has disappeared into the depths of time.
Only flowered for the first time last year and has been in the frame for about six years.
Tropaeolum tricolor
Seed head
Paeonia cambessedesii
Primula Sp
Primula Sp
Anemonella thalictroides