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Can you help name the plants please

Hello not long move into this home not an experienced gardened would anoyone help me name these shrubs plants ect thank you soo much I will put pics of the hostas up only because I was help identify theses plants and they have turned out lovely 
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Posts

  • JacquelinezJacquelinez Posts: 22

  • JennyJJennyJ Posts: 10,576
    The ones in the second post are lily-of-the-valley (Convallaria), not hostas (although the new shoots can look similar when they're just poking out of the ground).
    From the first post, the 4th is honeysuckle and the 3rd looks like a jasmine although it's early days to be confident in that one.
    Doncaster, South Yorkshire. Soil type: sandy, well-drained
  • JacquelinezJacquelinez Posts: 22
    Thank you so much Jenny here’s me telling all I have hostas 😂 lolly of the valley I was wondering why they we so close together 
    much appreciated 👍🦋
  • BorderlineBorderline Posts: 4,700
    Photo 1 might need a closer photo of the leaves and flowers, but suspect a Jasminum.
    Photo 2 is Galium Odoratum, Sweet Woodroof.
    Photo 4 looks like Hypericum, possibly Hypericum Androsaemum.
  • Liz.SprLiz.Spr Posts: 31
    Photo 1 is a honeysuckle not sure of name.
    I have green thumbs and no aphids on my roses.
  • FairygirlFairygirl Posts: 55,117
    edited May 2021
    No honeysuckle in either post.
    I'd agree with Hypericum, Convallaria [L of the V], Woodruff, and the shrub coming into leaf could be almost anything, so better to wait until foliage is clearer.  :)
    It's a place where beautiful isn't enough of a word....



    I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
  • DovefromaboveDovefromabove Posts: 88,147
    edited May 2021


    1. Jasminium (beesianum
    possibly?)

    2. Gallium odoratum
    aka Sweet woodruff

    3. Can’t tell
    yet. Need to see proper leaves etc. 

    4. Im going with hypericum for that one. 

    And yes .., lots of Lily of the Valley ... Convallaria majalis 😊 

    Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.





  • Busy-LizzieBusy-Lizzie Posts: 24,043
    Photo 1, with the pink flowers looks more like a flowering shrub such as deutzia or weigela but we need a more close up photo o the flowers. Here it is the right way up.



    2. Sweet Woodruff

    3. Jasmine. 

    4. Honeysuckle

    The last three are Lily of the Valley, as @JennyJ has said.
    Dordogne and Norfolk. Clay in Dordogne, sandy in Norfolk.
  • AsarumAsarum Posts: 661
    I think the first one could be Lonicera tatarica.
    East Anglia
  • JacquelinezJacquelinez Posts: 22

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