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Pam Moore 13-06-2008 11:51 AM

Leaf identification
 
Please can anyone suggest what this plant may be. No photo available
at present. It is in a friend's garden. She says it is nothing she
planted.
It is just like a violet leaf, but bigger than any violet I've seen;
about 3 inches across the widest part.
It is growing in a clump as violets do, but no sign of any flowers as
yet.
Any suggestions what I can look up?
TIA

Pam in Bristol

Des Higgins 13-06-2008 12:14 PM

Leaf identification
 
On Jun 13, 11:51 am, Pam Moore wrote:
Please can anyone suggest what this plant may be. No photo available
at present. It is in a friend's garden. She says it is nothing she
planted.
It is just like a violet leaf, but bigger than any violet I've seen;
about 3 inches across the widest part.
It is growing in a clump as violets do, but no sign of any flowers as
yet.
Any suggestions what I can look up?
TIA

Pam in Bristol


Violet shaped as in heart shaped? Is it damp where it is growing?
Marsh marigolds (Caltha) have yellow buttercup flowers but will
already have flowered by now. If the leaves are hand sized, you have
Coltsfoot (Tussilago) or Rats Umbrellas (Petasites fragrans) both of
which are weeds (nice plants but weeds nonetheless). If it is a
garden plant, there are some daisy family things with heart shaped
leaves and yellow flowers (Doronicum). Very hard to tell from words
only; wait til it flowers?

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 13-06-2008 03:34 PM

Leaf identification
 
In article 02bb446d-47d5-4746-a39e-
,
says...
On Jun 13, 11:51 am, Pam Moore wrote:
Please can anyone suggest what this plant may be. No photo available
at present. It is in a friend's garden. She says it is nothing she
planted.
It is just like a violet leaf, but bigger than any violet I've seen;
about 3 inches across the widest part.
It is growing in a clump as violets do, but no sign of any flowers as
yet.
Any suggestions what I can look up?
TIA

Pam in Bristol


Violet shaped as in heart shaped? Is it damp where it is growing?
Marsh marigolds (Caltha) have yellow buttercup flowers but will
already have flowered by now. If the leaves are hand sized, you have
Coltsfoot (Tussilago) or Rats Umbrellas (Petasites fragrans) both of
which are weeds (nice plants but weeds nonetheless). If it is a
garden plant, there are some daisy family things with heart shaped
leaves and yellow flowers (Doronicum). Very hard to tell from words
only; wait til it flowers?

Some of the violets have very large leaves
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea

Pam Moore 13-06-2008 04:27 PM

Leaf identification
 
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 15:34:39 +0100, Charlie Pridham
wrote:

In article 02bb446d-47d5-4746-a39e-
,
says...
On Jun 13, 11:51 am, Pam Moore wrote:
Please can anyone suggest what this plant may be. No photo available
at present. It is in a friend's garden. She says it is nothing she
planted.
It is just like a violet leaf, but bigger than any violet I've seen;
about 3 inches across the widest part.
It is growing in a clump as violets do, but no sign of any flowers as
yet.
Any suggestions what I can look up?
TIA

Pam in Bristol


Violet shaped as in heart shaped? Is it damp where it is growing?
Marsh marigolds (Caltha) have yellow buttercup flowers but will
already have flowered by now. If the leaves are hand sized, you have
Coltsfoot (Tussilago) or Rats Umbrellas (Petasites fragrans) both of
which are weeds (nice plants but weeds nonetheless). If it is a
garden plant, there are some daisy family things with heart shaped
leaves and yellow flowers (Doronicum). Very hard to tell from words
only; wait til it flowers?

Some of the violets have very large leaves


Well, we'll have to wait and see if it is a violet, Charlie. The
leaves are so much like that but so much bigger.
Yes, they are heart-shaped, with the same texture and habit as
violets, growing in a shady border among other plants but, according
to my friend, not planted!
No, Dazzhiggins, it's not Marsh Marigold or Coltsfoot. The former is
shinier, the latter more matt than these!
It's not doronicum or anything else daisy-like that I've ever seen.

Any usggestions of violets which might have leaves as big as, say,
lilac?

Pam in Bristol

Sacha[_3_] 13-06-2008 05:02 PM

Leaf identification
 
On 13/6/08 16:27, in article ,
"Pam Moore" wrote:
snip

Any usggestions of violets which might have leaves as big as, say,
lilac?

Pam in Bristol


Couldn't be a Trillium, could it?
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
(new website online but not completed - shop to come and some mild tweaking
to do!)



Pam Moore 13-06-2008 06:01 PM

Leaf identification
 
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 17:02:49 +0100, Sacha
wrote:

On 13/6/08 16:27, in article ,
"Pam Moore" wrote:
snip

Any usggestions of violets which might have leaves as big as, say,
lilac?

Pam in Bristol


Couldn't be a Trillium, could it?


No Sacha, thanks. I know Trillium, and it's not that either!

Pam in Bristol

beccabunga 13-06-2008 09:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pam Moore (Post 798005)
Please can anyone suggest what this plant may be. No photo available
at present. It is in a friend's garden. She says it is nothing she
planted.
It is just like a violet leaf, but bigger than any violet I've seen;
about 3 inches across the widest part.
It is growing in a clump as violets do, but no sign of any flowers as
yet.
Any suggestions what I can look up?
TIA

Pam in Bristol

Perhaps it has already flowered? In which case it may be Brunnera.


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