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Talkback: Scraping the barrel
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Whereas I absolutely agree about the Dahlia and to s lesser extent the Ceanothus, I have to disagree about the others. Whereas the Acuba is and the Lonicera are not exactly in my top ten they can fit the bill when planting up a terribly difficult position such as under a large conifer. There are more attractive cultivars of both. The Variegated ground elder I have myself and although it has got very invasive tendencies - again it can fit the bill when isolated in a semi wild area and has very attractive foliage. It collapses in very dry conditions however (having tried it under the very large conifer) It is all to do with the right plant for the right place.
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Heuchera 'Peach Flambe' on the other hand....
I understand the amenity value of some of the shrubs I mentioned and I by no means think that they are bad plants - just that I don't like them very much. Aucuba always reminds me of cheerless, dank shared front gardens full of dustbins and a bike with a buckled wheel.
My problem, I suppose, with many plants is that there are so many others that are so much better therefore why give up space in your valuable garden to anything that is mediocre?
Instead of variegated ground elder try Tiarella, Euphorbia robbiae, Geranium macrorrhizum or Asarum europaeum But I'm still not convinced by Heuchera Caramel and as for the Garden Monkey's Heuchera Peach Flambe? What an unutterably ghastly name. It is bad enough breeding things like that without burdening the poor unfortunates with names like that. It makes poor Tiramisu Andre (or whatever name it is that Peter and Jordan have chosen) seem very nearly classy.
Plants do evoke incredibly strong positive and negative reactions for me too. Most of the ones I really despise are things that I've had to work very hard to eradicate at some point like a Fuschia magellanica that took over one small shady garden and enveloped it in a dense gloom.
My greatest disdain, however, is reserved for Lysichiton americanus. The common name, skunk cabbage, says it all. This is beneath all weeds in my esteem. It smells terrible and when I was a kid on the west coast of Canada, about the worst thing you could do to another kid was to make him eat some. I don't think that you can imagine my shock and incredulity at finding it as a cultivated plant in this country.
I have grown skunk cabbage on streams and large ponds - it is undoubtedly striking. But then I suppose skunks are as well from a distance.
Opinion is opinion, I do not contest that, but one man's trash is another man's treasure!