View Single Post
  #8   Report Post  
Old 16-09-2019, 10:32 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Martin Brown[_2_] Martin Brown[_2_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2017
Posts: 267
Default Name of this giant plant?

On 14/09/2019 19:49, Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article ,
Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
On 14/09/2019 11:31, Charlie Pridham wrote:
On 13/09/2019 20:55, David Hill wrote:
On 13/09/2019 20:35, Terry Pinnell wrote:
Could someone kindly identify this plant we came across on a recent
walk in South
Cornwall please?

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cft2kqjt8k...lant.jpg?raw=1

Gunnera manicata

I think it may have been banned from sale? due to the number of garden
escapees!


Not in the UK, it hasn't been. It's widely available.


It is still available but they are having a bit of bother with it
escaping in the milder areas of western Scotland. Logan botanical
gardens has an impressive stand of the stuff that must be about 100m
square with a path through the middle. It looks primaeval.

Gunnera is an invasive plant in the west of Ireland and the Outer
Hebrides (possibly also Kintyre and Knapdale - someone reported seeing
lots around there as well).


On the other hand, almost all of the ecologies of the British Isles
are comprised entirely of recently invasive plants! Other than
Japanese knotweed (and, just possibly, Rhododendron ponticum in a
FEW locations), no recent introduction of land plants seems capable of
forming monocultures (the main ecological problem). It's a jungle out
there :-)


Himalayan balsam is becoming quite a problem in North Yorkshire on
stream and river banks wiping out almost everything else and spreading
rapidly. Only Japanese knotweed out competes it. Nettles and rosebay
willow herb both die out after a few years leaving a monoculture.

--
Regards,
Martin Brown