Erica carnea 2010

Submitted by Boland on

As I type this we are gettiong 5-10 cm of snow. I managed to take a couple of pictures of the Erica carnea at work (Memorial University of Newfoundland Botanical Garden) before the snow began.

In the first picture there is (foreground to background) December Rd, Anne Sparkes and Springwood White. The rhododendron is Double Dip, a yakushimanum hybrid.

The second pic is a closer view of Anne Sparkes...shy bloomer but makes up in its stunning winter colour...it will turn bright yellow in summer!

Comments


Submitted by Hoy on Fri, 04/16/2010 - 15:07

I am sorry I have no proper place for heathers. Have some but not enough. E. carnea do sometimes appear in pots as a weed apparently from seed. Airborne?


Submitted by Mark McD on Fri, 04/16/2010 - 20:34

Boland wrote:

As I type this we are gettiong 5-10 cm of snow.  I managed to take a couple of pictures of the Erica carnea at work (Memorial University of Newfoundland Botanical Garden) before the snow began.

In the first picture there is (foreground to background) December Rd, Anne Sparkes and Springwood White.  The rhododendron is Double Dip, a yakushimanum hybrid.

The second pic is a closer view of Anne Sparkes...shy bloomer but makes up in its stunning winter colour...it will turn bright yellow in summer!

Man this gets me charged... similar to Epimedium with awesome foliar colors at various times of the year, I want to, I must, grow some of these rich foliar-colored heaths and heathers one day, with Anne Sparkes included, to create a color tapestry of foliage and flower color for all season in a cold climate.  Thanks for the reminder!