Thread: Mystery plant
View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 07-03-2007, 02:55 PM
echinosum echinosum is offline
Registered User
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2006
Location: Chalfont St Giles
Posts: 1,340
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave Hill View Post
On 7 Mar, 12:26, "Muddymike" wrote:
Would someone be kind enough to identify this for me;

http://www.twango.com/media/Muddymik...e.10028?sort=5

I found it rolling around by the gate in the wind a few weeks ago, not in a
pot but with a perfect rootball and undamaged. I stuck it into some compost
in a pot in the greenhouse and it has now flowered. Can I plant it in the
garden?

Mike


Skimmia Japonica, perfectly hardy, and on sale ay B & Q today for
£5.95 so a nice find.
see http://www.rainyside.com/features/pl...Japonica..html

David Hill
Abacus Nurseries
They have separate male and female plants, and it is common to plant them in couples to get the persistent red berries on the female plant during the rest of the year. They need to be quite close together, my lone female (the male was found dead suffocated by overgrown conifers when I bought the house) is only sparsely pollinated by next door's male plant a mere 25 yds away.

I find it pretty tough in the garden. We live in a dry area. It is growing close to mature conifers and doesn't get any fertilizing or direct watering from me, though it probably benefits from watering/ferts to nearby rhodies.