There's always something interesting in the derelict garden of the railway cottages! At the moment it's a splendid stand of deep oraange Day Lilies growing amongst Acanthus mollis:
Today we went looking for a group of Watsonia schlechteri we remembered in the unburnt area just above the railway line.
Then Pippa remembered there was a plant which we had never identified before, growing right there. Here is a bunch of spent flowers:
For the first time we've found flowers still on it, another yellow pea! Possibly Aspalathus callosa.
This gives an idea of the size of the plant, it must have been impressive with many of the flowers open!
We're sorry to have missed this little plant flowering.
The spent flowers or seed pods looked familiar:
Later in the walk we looked at the Aristea bakeri we have been watching (below), and found very similar pods. Could this (above) be Aristea racemosa, or A. juncifolia? It was past 4pm so it might have flowered this morning.
Our first Therianthus this year! Growing here amongst Pseudoselago spuria which have nearly finished flowering. On the right are more about to open.
Here was an interesting plant, easily overlooked, but I spotted tiny flowers on the tips.
Here is another plant, not so far advanced:
We were aiming for the stand of Agapanthus walshii we have been watching open gradually for a few weeks.
The way the flowers hang sets them apart.
We counted 45 buds or flowers in this small area. Not bad for an extremely rare plant!
A little way on, while watching a pair of black crows, Pippa noticed a splash of deep pink. Corymbium glabrum var glabrum, unless there's another variety with this deeper pink.
We were making for the Curlygrass fern Schizaea pectinata we had found before, to find the fans of the flowers more fully developed and greener than before:
I spotted what I thought was yet another Purple Powder Puff Pseudoselago serrata, but this was growing too close to the ground. Close up it was something completely different!
The flowers are deceptively long trumpets, and if you look carefully you can see long forked stamens coming out of some of the flowers. The closest we get is Merciera, but this grows too close to the ground for them.
We found another Corymbium, further advanced and much paler than the previous one.
Up there we found this Purple Powder Puff Pseudoselago serrata, definitely the biggest of the day!
We wanted to check on the offspring of the burnt Pagoda flower Mimetes cucullatus which would have been in flower now. The babies are looking well!
These have clearly grown from seed scattered from the parent close by. Also in the Protea family, where we were disappointed that the re-growth we had seen at the bases of Protea cynaroides had shrivelled up, we are now finding seedlings close by:
What I thought last week was a Tar Pea Bolusafra bituminosa was identified by the experts as Rhynchosia because its leaves were in threes and pointed. This is more like it, with rounded leaves! We forgot to check if it was sticky!
It's late in the year to be finding Albuca. The latest in the books, up to November is A. cooperi, otherwise A. juncifolia would be a contender.
The leaves look like this:
We stopped off at the Watsonia borbonica from last week, looking as good as before!
And near it a sea of Combflowers, Micranthus:
On the way back, this 'Weed' looked a bit out of place!
How did it get there?
:-) A
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