Do I pull it out or is it a rare flower?
In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote:
Well, I knew it was Asteraceae (Compositae in pre-decimal currency), so
it was a matter of looking through the Comps in my book of British flora
(The Illustrated Flora of GB and Northern Europe - Blamey and
Grey-Wilson). It wasn't that difficult to find, as just about all other
Asteraceae have leaves with non-smooth edges, and they are fairly wide
to some extent or other. Goat's Beard has very thin, smooth-edged leaves.
Salsify doesn't :-)
Damn. I posted too quickly. What I should have said is that's another
Tragopogon.
True, but I think the colour is a bit of a give-away. Isn't it really
just a purple Goat's Beard?
Sort of. It's normally described as a different species, but I don't
know how separate the species really are. I have given up growing it
in favour of scorzonera, which is more useful (e.g. you can blanch it
for salads, and eat its leaves as a green vegetable). I discovered
the last only recently, but it's really quite good. And, it's easier
to grow, being perennial.
I believe that you can do the same with the Tragopogons (including
T. pratensis), but haven't done it myself.
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
|