Anemones flowers are essential
ingredients in the garden, adding height and clear colors in shades
of purple, pink and white. You should grow them in cottage gardens
and borders where they inject plenty of presence to fill the gaps
left by perennials. The best flowering time for this plant is late
winter until early or mid spring.
The plant has about 120 species. It is found in north and south
temperate zones. Anemones grow to a height of 20-30cm and are 5 cm
deep.
They can thrive in just about anything
from chalk to heavy clay, although they prefer damp, limy loam. You
should dig fertilizer into soil a week or longer before planting or
apply to top of soil after planting and water in. The bulbs are very
free flowering and so require generous amounts of fertilizer.
The plant is largely untroubled by
pests and diseases, but look out for the leaf eelworm. These
microscopic pests live and multiply inside the leaf, causing small
sections between the veins to turn brown. They're rarely fatal, but
removing badly infected leaves is presently the only control
available.
The plant has great bulbs. It’s a low
care and free flowering with each corm producing numerous cheerful
flowers. It’s well worth planting in any garden for loads of
carefree color. It is also great in vases.
Did
you know?
·
Three main species - A.
hupehensis, A. vitifolium and A. tomentosa - actually come from
China. These were erroneously called Japanese anemones after one
particular form was first recorded near Nagasaki in 1695.
·
The plant is spread by
fibrous underground roots that send up new shoots from tiny buds.
This makes them ideal for taking root cuttings in autumn and
replanting the following autumn when the ground is moist, either
after rain or a thorough watering.