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Lintama 18-07-2010 08:22 PM

Yet another ID required
 
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Please can somebody tell me what this plant is? I started growing some seeds last summer of this plant. They were tiny this time last year but overwintered in my greenhouse so obviously a hardy perennial. The person I got them from could not give me a name. He said the flower is a kind of spike shooting up in early Summer and it was a very dark purple. He got the seeds from a park near to where he works. I haven't been able to find the plant on the 'net'.

Stewart Robert Hinsley 19-07-2010 02:08 PM

Yet another ID required
 
In message , Lintama
writes

Please can somebody tell me what this plant is? I started growing some
seeds last summer of this plant. They were tiny this time last year but
overwintered in my greenhouse so obviously a hardy perennial. The
person
I got them from could not give me a name. He said the flower is a kind
of spike shooting up in early Summer and it was a very dark purple. He

got the seeds from a park near to where he works. I haven't been able
to find the plant on the 'net'.

I can't identify it, so I'll take Dave Hill's word, but your conclusion
that it is a hardy perennial was unsafe. It could have been a hardy
biennial. Depending on how much protection you greenhouse provides it
could also be a half-hardy biennial or half-hardy perennial.

Digging around the WWW I find that it is hardy to -10C or so. But it is
also described as a half-hardy annual.

--
Lintama

--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

Lintama 19-07-2010 11:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stewart Robert Hinsley (Post 894636)
In message , Lintama
writes

Please can somebody tell me what this plant is? I started growing some
seeds last summer of this plant. They were tiny this time last year but
overwintered in my greenhouse so obviously a hardy perennial. The
person
I got them from could not give me a name. He said the flower is a kind
of spike shooting up in early Summer and it was a very dark purple. He

got the seeds from a park near to where he works. I haven't been able
to find the plant on the 'net'.

I can't identify it, so I'll take Dave Hill's word, but your conclusion
that it is a hardy perennial was unsafe. It could have been a hardy
biennial. Depending on how much protection you greenhouse provides it
could also be a half-hardy biennial or half-hardy perennial.

Digging around the WWW I find that it is hardy to -10C or so. But it is
also described as a half-hardy annual.

--
Lintama

--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

I am confused at your answer. Who is Dave Hill and where is his answer?!!

Thankfully I have found out that the plant is actually an ornamental millet which is supposed to be an annual which I find a bit strange as I have had it over a year now which was grown from a seed. Still waiting for it to flower though.

Thank you for your response.

[email protected] 20-07-2010 07:07 AM

Yet another ID required
 
In article ,
Lintama wrote:

Thankfully I have found out that the plant is actually an ornamental
millet which is supposed to be an annual which I find a bit strange as I
have had it over a year now which was grown from a seed. Still waiting
for it to flower though.


Many 'annuals' and 'biennials' are actually short-lived monocarpic
plants (i.e. they die after flowering), and will be annual in good
conditions and biennial in poor ones of if they germinate late.
Angelica is also one, but is classed as a perennial, because it
often takes 3 years to flower and seed.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

Stewart Robert Hinsley 20-07-2010 09:05 AM

Yet another ID required
 
In message , Lintama
writes

Stewart Robert Hinsley;894636 Wrote:
In message , Lintama
writes-

Please can somebody tell me what this plant is? I started growing some
seeds last summer of this plant. They were tiny this time last year but
overwintered in my greenhouse so obviously a hardy perennial. The
person
I got them from could not give me a name. He said the flower is a kind
of spike shooting up in early Summer and it was a very dark purple. He-
got the seeds from a park near to where he works. I haven't been able
to find the plant on the 'net'.

I can't identify it, so I'll take Dave Hill's word, but your conclusion

that it is a hardy perennial was unsafe. It could have been a hardy
biennial. Depending on how much protection you greenhouse provides it
could also be a half-hardy biennial or half-hardy perennial.

Digging around the WWW I find that it is hardy to -10C or so. But it is

also described as a half-hardy annual.

--
Lintama

--
Stewart Robert Hinsley


I am confused at your answer. Who is Dave Hill and where is his
answer?!!


Dave Hill is the person who identified the plant as Pennisetum glaucum
'Purple Majesty', before I responded.

Thankfully I have found out that the plant is actually an ornamental
millet which is supposed to be an annual which I find a bit strange as I
have had it over a year now which was grown from a seed. Still waiting
for it to flower though.

Thank you for your response.


--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

No Name 20-07-2010 11:00 AM

Yet another ID required
 
wrote:
Many 'annuals' and 'biennials' are actually short-lived monocarpic
plants (i.e. they die after flowering), and will be annual in good
conditions and biennial in poor ones of if they germinate late.
Angelica is also one, but is classed as a perennial, because it
often takes 3 years to flower and seed.


My angelica appears to have turned into a triffid!


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