Impatiens ‘Congo Cockatoo’
There is no shortage of beautiful volunteer sunflowers all over my garden, for the most part I let them grow where they sprout, at varying sizes.
A yearly favorite, 12 foot sunflower loom overhead.
Leonotis (Wild Dagga)
Bulbine frutescens – they open and close with the daylight.
Fuchsia boliviana — Red Bolivian Fuchsia. Added bonus they produce a tasty fruit similar to a grape.
Rose amongst a tree lupin. Perfect!
Hibiscus tree is starting to flower again. Excellent!
Rhodochiton atrosanguineum, so strange.
Abutilon pictum Thompsonii (Varigated Flowering Maple)
White Guara flowers all August
Alcea ‘Peaches and Dreams. This is it’s second year and it’s really gone overboard. Fighting for the tallest thing in my garden, this hollyhock is neck and neck with my jerusalem artichoke. 12+ feet and counting. Non stop blooms, like a slow motion firework.
Simply Amazing…
The very first cyclamen flower of the season. Just when you start to miss them again, they appear.
Chilean Glory Vine – Eccremocarpus scaber
Thalictrum delavayi ‘Hewitt’s Double’ – a late flowering minature thalictrum!
Anigozanthos flavidus (Kangaroo Paw)
Impatiens Congo Cockatoo
Orange Daylily, perhaps Hemerocallis ‘Kwanso’. The last bloom on the stalk…
Echeveria glauca
One of many different shades of gladiolus
I hope this satisfies your need for plant eye candy.. Months of work put into a 35 second photo spread. Calms the mind, feeds the soul.
Ah Impatiens niamniamensis, the plant that really started the fire for strange tropical plants. Little did I know when I found this odd plant at Le Coteau it would spark such a ridiculous obsession. Suppliers in Canada are few and far between but tropical impatiens really fascinate me. Much like orchids they have some of the most beautiful flowers I’ve ever seen. I’m excited to find more along my travels.
For the moment, Impatiens niamniamensis is one of two exotic varieties in my possession, and so far so good. I’ve had this one for nearly a year now and it’s pretty easy plant to grow. Throughout the winter I kept it under a grow light, and that may explain why it’s currently so tall at over 3 feet in height. It did get the odd spider mite infestation but being the neurotic plant collector that I am, it got a regular hit of pyrethrin which sorted it right out. I moved it outdoors in mid June and since being outside it’s really started to thrive again. It’s height helps it stand out in the garden and escape the canopy of strange ground dwellers.
The shape of the flower suggests to me that this plant is pollinated by something strange indeed. Moth tongue or strangely curved bird beak? I’m afraid up here in Canada I might never know, haven’t seen any hummers try yet.
These are the buds of of the up and coming “parrot beak” flowers. What’s stranger are the small crystals this plant creates near these clusters of flowers. I’ve still not figured out what they’re for, perhaps to lure in pollinators, or protectors?
Information gained thus far:
The plant roots readily from cutting and if you want more plants, wait for side branch to shoot off, snap off and root accordingly. They have a pretty high success rate. Other notable things I’ve learnt while growing this plant for the last year is that while they survive just fine indoors, and do alright outdoors in the summer, these are still true tropical plants. I have one at the greenhouse and in the humidity and heat it just goes nuts. The growth rate is tripled and the flowering is out of control. The more heat and humidity the better!
For more information on this plant see my post from last September here.