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LAMBLEY NURSERY SPRING 2012 LAMBLEY NURSERY AND GARDENS www.lambley.com.au WEBSITE We now have fully automated on-line ordering. The website is constantly updated with new plants. Subscribe to our newsletter on-line for garden note updates and rare plant bulletins. PACKING We take a great deal of care in growing, selecting, packing and dispatching our plants. Our policy is to replace plants which do not arrive in good condition. If there is a problem please let us know within 24 hours as we will not be able to take responsibility after that time. DELIVERY TIME Plants will be dispatched as quickly as possible. Due to the large number of orders during catalogue times, there may occasionally be some delay. Please let us know if you need plants delivered by a certain time. NURSERY AND GARDEN OPENING TIMES 2012 Open every day from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Closed Christmas day. Lambley Nursery, ‘Burnside’, Lesters Road, Ascot, Victoria, 3364 Phone: (03) 5343 4303 Fax: (03) 5343 4257 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.lambley.com.au ASCOT is 12km north of the Western freeway, which by-passes Ballarat, on the C 287 Ballarat-Clunes-Maryborough Road about halfway between Miners Rest and Clunes. Drought tolerance and frost hardiness. If plants are described as being drought tolerant it means that they flourish here at Lambley with a minimum of watering, about four times a year. All plants are frost hardy down to –5C unless otherwise stated. This catalogue has been printed using soy based inks on environmentally sustainable paper. Cover: Sisyrinchium striatum radiant in the Spring sunshine at Lambley 2 Achillea ageratifolia Greek Yarrow This fine evergreen plant makes a 30cm wide and 15cm tall cushion of finely notched silver leaves. During spring it produces 15cm tall stems each one carrying heads of several large white flowers. It has been happy in a bed of rock garden plants here at Lambley. This part of the garden is mulched with fine gravel. A fine plant for a sunny rock garden.. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Aethionema 'Warley Rose' Warley Rose Persian Candytuft An evergreen sub-shrub from the Caucasus which makes one of the best of all plants for the rock garden, a dry slope or for trailing over a sunny wall. The clear deep pink flowers are held in dense showy heads for much of spring and early summer. It is drought hardy when once established and revels in a hot sunny spot. 20cm tall by 35cm wide. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Agapanthus 'Snow Goose' I raised this variety about 25 years ago and I rate it as one of the best relatively dwarf, white flowered Agapanthus. It makes lovely low mounds of narrow evergreen leaves and, during summer, 70cm tall stems carry large heads of waxy white flowers opening from lime green buds. 70cm x 80cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 3 Agastache 'Sweet Lili’ In his fine book “Guide To Plants” Paul Bangay writes that “I use this in all my gardens as it is such a long-flowering plant and has a very distinct and unusual flower colour”. “Sweet Lili” was raised here at Lambley and is one of the best plants we grow. The top third of the 120cm tall flower stems are smothered, from early summer until winter, with apricot tinted rich amethyst flowers. 120cm x 60cm. Sun. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Anthemis 'Alice Glenn' I’ve grown Anthemis ‘Susannah Mitchell’ for many years and it is as good a plant as anyone could want. A few years ago one of its stems had deeper coloured flowers on it. This sport was propagated and I named it Anthemis ’Alice Glenn’ for my late mother. It has greyish evergreen foliage and produces its soft lemon flowers from early spring through to autumn if it is dead headed occasionally. Drought tolerant sun lover. 35cm x100cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Artemisia caucasica Caucasian Wormwood This beautiful carpeting plant was grown by us from seed collected in the windswept dry mountains of Turkey. This wormwood forms a glistening mat of intricately cut silver foliage. I grow it in a rarely watered bed with other dry climate rock garden plants where it is happy in full sun. It has grown 2cm tall by 50cm across in two years $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 4 Artemisia ‘Powis Castle’ Powis Castle Wormwood This vigorous silver foliage plant is an important element in our double borders where we have it planted near Aster x frikartii and Salvia ‘Raspberry Royal’. A tough, sun loving shrub it soon makes a 90cm wide by 60cm tall mound. It has beautiful glistening much dissected silver leaves. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Arthropodium 'Te Puna' New Zealand Rock Lily We imported this from New Zealand a few years ago. A dwarf rock lily, which has handsome arching sword shaped leaves and produces masses of shooting-star, lily-like flowers during spring and summer. As frost below –3C will cut the foliage to the ground, gardeners with really cold winters should plant it in a sheltered position. 30cm x 30cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Buddleja 'Dartmoor' Huge branching heads of rich lilac flowers on a medium sized well branched shrub. We cut it back to about 120cm in late winter or early spring. This hard pruning encourages the production of large terminal flower panicles and good side panicles. Sun. Tolerant of heat and drought. 3m x 2.5m. Recognised as one of the best by the Royal Horticultural Society which gave this plant an Award Of Garden Merit. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 5 Campanula 'E.K. Toogood' Toogood’s Serbian Bellflower A fine trailing groundcover for a shady spot in the garden where for many spring and summer months it will cover itself with upward facing white eyed, lavender-blue flowers. Evergreen and very tough needing only the occasional watering when once established. 15cm tall by 60cm wide. I grow it under a Californian Lilac, Ceanothus arborea ‘Trewithen Blue’. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Chrysanthemum 'Buninyong Bronze' This is the only perpetual flowering Chrysanthemum I’ve ever grown. From spring until early winter and beyond this plant produces a continual display of small bronze-red flowers. I grew it in pots at the front door last season but it is just as happy in the garden. It picks well of course. 60cm by 40cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Ceanothus 'Blue Sapphire' I’ve grown Ceanothus ‘Blue Sapphire’ for the past five or six years and it is a terrific plant, making long low gracefully arching stems covered in small very dark green, almost black, glossy leaves. The whole mound is smothered with deep blue flowers in spring. One of the best low growing shrubs in the garden here. Sun loving, tough and drought tolerant. 100cm x 150cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 6 Ceanothus 'Concha' Arguably the most beautiful of all the Ceanothus varieties making an evergreen shrub up to 2 metres in height and as much across. The vibrant dark blue flowers are produced from magenta buds early in spring. Can be pruned to keep it suitable for smaller gardens. Happiest in a sunny spot a inina dry part of the garden. It hates wet feet though. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Echinops 'Taplow Blue' The best of its kind with spherical flower heads, steel-blue in bud opening to large balls of powdery mauve-blue when in full flower. Bold divided foliage, stiff vertical stems and the drumstick flower heads give this plant great architectural strength. We cut it back to the ground in summer when the first flowers are finished and are rewarded by another display in autumn. Full sun. Drought tolerant when once established. 120cm x 75cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Eryngium amethystinum Italian Sea Holly An easily grown, rare and beautiful plant from Southern Europe which makes a superb addition to the flower garden. During summer 40cm tall branching flower stems carry heads of steely blue flowers with a faint hint of amethyst. The flowers last a long time in the vase and also dry well. Sun or light shade. 40cm x 35cm $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 7 Eryngium bourgatii ‘Oxford Blue’ This has been growing in our dry climate garden for ten years or more. The flowers, a metallic blue thimble, are circled by a metallic blue ruff, as intricate as a snowflake. This Sea Holly has interesting evergreen foliage, much cut and two toned, green and silver. If spent flowers are removed it will bloom from late spring into winter. 50cm x 50cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Euphorbia charachias ssp wulfennii Wulfen’s Spurge I couldn’t really imagine a late winter or spring without this plant. At this time the flower heads, which at first are curled over like a bishop’s crosier, unfurl and open into huge lime-green panicles. The display lasts for some months after which I cut the spent flower stems to the ground. 140cm by 120cm $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Euphorbia robbiae Miss Robb’s Bonnet This is one of the best groundcovers for dry shade where it will make suckering 40 cm tall evergreen stems clothed in handsome blue-green foliage. During spring the whole is covered by heads of lime green flowers. Whilst it grows in dry shade it is also happy in other parts of the garden whether sunny or not. 40cm X 60 cm. It was first brought into cultivation from its Turkish haunts in Miss Robb’s hat box early last century. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 8 Gaillardia 'Lambley Strain' Lambley Blanket Flower I grew the American raised Gaillardia ‘Fanfare’ for a few years but sadly it didn’t stay true to type. Fanfare’s progeny though are really good with bright yellow and burnt orange flowers produced on stiff stems from spring well into autumn as long as it is dead headed. Some summer water is needed. 35cm x 30cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Geranium 'Rambling Robin' A newly imported plant which we got from Olivier Filippi’s nursery in the South of France. A hybrid between two South African species, G. incanum and G. robustum, it has the trailing habit of the former and vigour of the latter. In the dry garden it has made good evergreen mats of deeply incised silver-green leaves. It produces large lavender-pink flowers for most of spring, summer and autumn. It is frost, heat and drought tolerant. 30cm tall by 60 to 80 cm across. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Halimium lasianthum ssp. formosum Yellow Sun Rose One of the best dwarf shrubs for a dry garden as it is good in both flower and foliage. A grey leaved evergreen, 100cm in height by 150cm across. During spring and early summer it covers itself with good sized rich yellow flowers with large purple brown blotch at the base of each petal. A tough sun loving drought tolerant plant of hot Mediterranean hillsides. 100cm x 150cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 9 Helianthus angustifolius Perennial Sunflower An extraordinary plant, H. angustifolius makes 3 metre tall stems clothed in narrow dark green leaves. It looks more like a Lilium than anything else until an eruption of bright yellow sunflowers covers the whole in autumn. At its peak it startles visitors (and us). It is long lived and self supporting and has been in the same spot in our garden for ten years or more. Sun. 300cm x 90cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Hemerocallis 'Cranberry Baby' Cranberry Baby Day Lily Day lilies which repeat flower are always useful plants. Deep rich cranberry pink, flared flowers are produced, several to the stem, from mid spring until quite late in the autumn. I divide and replant dwarf day lilies every 3 or 4 years. Tough sun loving and reputed to be drought tolerant although we have only grown it in irrigated beds. 40cm x 40cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Helianthus angustifolius in the Lambley borders 10 Herbaceous Hibiscus in the Vegetable Garden Border Hibiscus ‘Ascot Pink’ Frost Hardy Ascot Pink Hibiscus This plant started Lambley off on its search for frost hardy Hibiscus. We were given it by a neighbouring farmer, Jim Kinnersley, who had grown it for many years. It sails through our minus six degrees frosty winter nights. The huge 20cm wide pink flowers are produced, many to a stem, from January until mid April. Hibiscus 'Ascot Pink' looks splendid in our stock beds planted with Miscanthus transmorrisonensis. 150cm x 100cm. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Hibiscus ‘Moondance’ Frost Hardy Moondance Hibiscus Frost hardy down to -20C, dwarf, free and long flowering and enjoying the most torrid summer heat this hibiscus is happy both inland and on the coast. The huge warm ivory flowers each with a magenta eye are more than 20cm across. Each stem, if the plant is well fed, produces up to twenty flowers in a long summer autumn succession. Give it full sun and a little summer water and it will be happy. 120cm x 100cm. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 11 Hibiscus ‘Moy Grande’ Frost Hardy Moy Grande Hibiscus Hibiscus ‘Moy Grande’ has the largest flower of all, the shot silk, deep rosepink flowers are 30cm in diameter. A spectacular plant which grows 120cm tall and as much across in our garden. Like the other frost hardy herbaceous back to the Hibiscus, we wecut cutthisthis back it ground to the in winter. ground in winter. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Hibiscus ‘Raspberry Rose’ Hibiscus ‘Raspberry Rose’ can grow very large, with us some 180cm tall by as much across and is a very generous bloomer producing hundreds of 15cm diameter raspberry red flowers. It makes a superb show in o long narrow border in the vegetable garden as it flowers for all the hot months of the year. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Iris unguicularis ‘Mary Barnard’ Mary Barnard Algerian Iris One of the toughest of evergreen perennials, which gives so much reward for so little effort, thriving as it does in almost any position except dense shade. It has thin arching dark green leaves in which the loveliest of fragrant dark blue flowers nestle from May until September. The flowers last well in water if they are gathered in bud just before they unfurl. Sun or light shade. 40cm x 50cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 12 Kniphofia ‘Strawberries and Cream’ Strawberries and Cream Torch Flower This Kniphofia has coral-pink flowers which, as they open, turn to cream making for a charming effect. It flowers for many months from spring until late summer. I cut the evergreen leaves down to about 15cm every winter to keep the plant tidy. 120cm tall by 80cm wide. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Linaria anticaria ‘Antique Silver’ Antique Silver Toad Flax A trailing, suckering toad flax growing no taller than 15cm with small grey green leaves and masses of small pale silver mauve flowers for most of spring, summer and autumn. It has settled down well in our dry garden where we grow it under an olive tree and around salvias and humming bird mints. Happy in sun or light shade where it will form a charming demure carpet. 25cm x 20cm. $9.00 or 3 for $24.00 Lupinus longiflorus I was given this marvellous plant by Pat Bowley who has a beautiful garden near Bowral in NSW. Its stems are covered in beautiful fingered silky leaves. Each stem branches several times and the top of each branch holds a blue and white lupin. Tough and drought tolerant, it has made a great addition to our dry garden. 100cm tall by 120cm wide. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 13 Lychnis coronaria Dusty Miller This makes a basal rosette of grey leaves with grey flower stems clothed with grey leaves and crowned by brilliant magenta flowers. It’s very easily grown and needs very little extra watering during summer. Whilst it is a short lived perennial you will always find some self sown seedlings if you don’t dead head it too quickly. Sun. 60cm x 40cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Miscanthus sinensis ‘Cosmopolitan’ Cosmopolitan Silver Feather Grass This superb variegated grass was first cultivated fifty years ago in Japan. It is almost evergreen with us, although it needs cutting to the ground in mid winter to keep it looking clean, and makes 2 metres tall foliage fountains. The copper-red flower feathers, held well above the leaves, are produced in late summer and autumn. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Miscanthus oligostachyus 'Eileen Quinn' Dwarf Feather Grass A very handsome dwarf Miscanthus. The bronze feathery flower heads are produced well clear of the leaves during summer and autumn. Grow it in drifts rather than as individual specimens. Sun 60cm x 50cm. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 14 Seeds 15 Lambley’s First Vegetable and Flower Seed Catalogue I heard a terribly sad story the other day. A vegetable grower who supplies local farmers markets planted two thousand open pollinated, “heritage” Brussels sprouts seedlings. After nurturing, watering, weeding and feeding these plants for the best part of eight months his total crop of sprouts was nil. Not one sprout was set. This is just a more extreme example of what I found when I grew “heritage” seeds. After all the work that a successful vegetable garden requires there should be some reward, there should be some vegetables to harvest. The problem with “heritage” and most open pollinated seed is that no serious seed company is maintaining the strains which then degenerate to such a point that they are at best second rate and at worst, as in the case of Brussels sprouts, useless. I grew the beautiful looking watermelon Moon and Stars for four years in a row and didn’t once get a ripe fruit. The watermelon and cantaloupe varieties which I grow now all ripen here every year, no matter what the weather, as they take only 70 to 75 days to produce fruit. This means that people in inland NSW, all of SA, Victoria and Tasmania can grow these crops with confidence. Most modern vegetable seed breeders now sell hybrid seed. This isn’t genetically modified rather the breeder cross pollinates two different strains of the same vegetable. This gives consistency and hybrid vigour. It of course protects the breeder from others pirating his work. This modern breeding aims to produce vegetables which are well flavoured, disease resistant and with a short growing season. Most if not all producers who rely on vegetable growing for their livelihood grow their plants from hybrid seed even though this seed is much more expensive. For example in the case of Brussels sprouts the hybrid seed we sell costs us 100 times more than would the open pollinated Long Island Improved variety. Hybrid seed is much more expensive but given similar growing conditions is much more likely to be productive. I have grown nearly all of the varieties in this seed list. They are the best modern varieties we can find. F1 written after the vegetable’s name signifies that it is a hybrid strain. All of the flower seed listed can be planted or rather are better planted straight into their final position in the garden. This is a cheap and effective way of filling the garden with flowering annuals. Full cultivation notes will be included with each seed order. 16 Vegetables Basil Italian Large Leaf This variety is sweeter and has less of a clove-like flavour than normal basil. I find it a much pleasanter basil to use in pesto and tomato salads. I never plant basil seed, or plants for that matter, in the open garden before December as cold weather is anathema to this delicious herb. 200 seeds $3.50 Beetroot Red Ace F1 This is the best beetroot I’ve grown. Fast growing, good as baby beet, lasts well in the garden and is tender even when it makes a large size. As it is slow to bolt we plant it from August through to February. 100 seeds $4.00 Bok Choi Black Summer F1 The best Bok Choi of the half a dozen varieties I’ve planted. It has dark green leaves on light green stalks. and makes a perfect vase shape even when small. Slow to bolt. I plant from September through until February. 100 seeds $4.00 Broccoli Amadeus F1 For late winter and spring planting for harvesting spring, summer, and autumn. It produces large heads here which were followed by lots of side shoots. I picked heads from one planting over a period of ten weeks. 20 seeds $4.00 Broccoli Marathon F1 I plant this tried and true variety from December until February and pick from autumn through the winter. It produces good side shoots after the main head is cut. 20 seeds $4.00 17 Brussels Sprouts Diablo F1 The best Brussels Sprouts strain I’ve ever grown and I’ve tried twenty or so. Diablo produces crops over a long period from late autumn through most of the winter if seeds are planted no later than November. 20 seeds $5.00 Bush Bean Simba A round dark green bush bean with terrific flavour. It is a heavy cropper and has good disease resistance. Its heavy frame keeps the beans straight and clean as they are held well off the soil. It takes about 50 days to harvest from seed planting. I plant in mid-October, mid-November and midDecember. 50 seeds $4.00 Carrot Nelson F1 This is the most reliable early carrot I’ve grown here. I plant it from August until December and get a succession of crisp, sweet, well flavoured baby carrots even during very hot weather. 100 seeds for $4.00 Carrot Napoli F1 I plant this baby carrot in February and get crisp well flavoured carrots all winter long. Although a baby carrot it remains good, sweet and crisp even when it makes a larger size. 100 seeds $4.00 Cauliflower Bishop F1 I find this to be a very reliable cauliflower which will flourish in many weather conditions from hot to cold. I plant the seed from September until January. 20 seeds $4.00 Chives Fine Leaf I always have a patch of chives in the garden. This is an excellent flavoured variety with delicate fine leaves good for both cooking and as a garnish. 200 seeds $3.50 18 Cavalo Nero, Black Kale or Toscano Makes a handy autumn and winter vegetable if seed is planted during November. I can pick a couple of bunches every week from May until September off half a dozen plants. Reputed to be good for baby leaf at any time although I haven’t grown it like that yet. 150 seeds $4.00 Coriander Calypso As I grow coriander for its leaves rather than for its seeds I grow this slow bolting variety. It is ready to pick in less than a month and a half and will under reasonable conditions take three or four months before it runs up to seed. It’s best to sow seed at six weekly intervals. 200 seeds $3.50 Endive Dubuisson A beautiful frisee endive with fine green leaves which are soft yellow in the centre. I plant seed from September until February and get a crop for much of the year as it is very slow to bolt. 50 seeds $4.00 Leek King Richard I sell the true strain of this very early leek. From an early November planting I was digging decent leeks by March. In fact Criss and I served fifty people with Leeks a la Grecque at a charity lunch here one March a couple of years ago. As it is slow to bolt it is happy well into winter too. 100 seeds $4.00 Leek Lancelot This is the leek I grow for a late winter and early spring crop but again I get the seed planted during November. It has beautiful long white shanks and a blue-green top. 100 seeds $4.00 Lettuce Claremont One of the best mini-Cos I’ve grown making 25cm tall plants with a good dense heart. It has an excellent sweet flavour. I plant a metre or so each month from August until February which makes for a long picking season. 100 seeds $4.00 19 Parsley Giant of Italy A real giant but with wonderful Italian parsley flavour this is the variety which has amazed visitors to the nursery with its size and productivity. I plant seed on bottom heat early in the spring and outside in the garden after mid-November. Parsley will sometime bolt if seed is planted in soil which is too cold. 150 seeds $3.50 Parsnip Lancer I plant this superb variety of Parsnip from September until December. Later plantings will give small roots. I harvest the roots from March/April until the end of winter as even very large roots of this variety are good. 150 seeds $4.00 Radicchio Red Preco F1 An early slow bolting well flavoured variety which gives me good heads from late spring through the summer. I plant the seed from September until December. 100 seeds $4.00 Roquette Astro My favourite roquette,it is spicy but not too hot. Its leaves are wide and not deeply lobed. It stands hot summer temperatures well. I have it nearly the year round if I plant it anew every six weeks or so. 150 seeds $4.00 Roquette Surrey With great flavour and wild roquette appearance I grow this rich spicy, but not too hot, variety with Astro. 150 seeds $4.00 Spinach Tyee Fi The best savoyed spinach I’ve grown with terrific flavour. As it is very slow to bolt I plant it from early spring until autumn. I can harvest fully grown spinach for ten months of the year. 100 seeds $4.00 20 Sweet Corn Supersweet Samurai F1 I’ve grown this “honey and cream” variety of supersweet corn for five years. It needs to be grown on its own because it will not produce supersweet cobs if it is pollinated by nonsupersweet varieties. I raise the first plantings in a polyhouse in October and plant in the garden in November and up to the end of December. 75 seeds $4.00 Cantaloupe Sarah’s Choice F1 A fantastic tasting, juicy cantaloupe which ripens even in colder areas of Australia. I plant it in the garden in early November and harvest the first fruit during February. I do sometimes germinate it in pots in the poly house in September and plant out November for an earlier crop still. This variety is the best whether grown in a cold, hot or in between areas. 20 seeds $5.00 Pumpkin Kabocha Cha-Cha F1 According to all those in the family who eat pumpkin this is the best flavoured with bright orange, nutty, sweet flavoured flesh which keeps its shape when cooked. It is really the only pumpkin I grow now. I plant the seed in the garden during November and the pumpkins are ripe by late March. I store them on their side in the cellar and they are still good the following spring. A good variety to grow in cooler as well as warmer climates. 20 seeds for $5.00 Watermelon Little Baby Flower F1 The smallest watermelon I’ve ever grown. It only is 15cm in diameter and weighs about a kilo when ripe. It takes a mere 70 days to ripen (as opposed to 110 to 120 days for many older varieties) from a mid-November planting. Seed can be planted up until the end of December and fruit will still ripen. In warmer coastal areas seed can be planted in early October. 20 seeds $5.00 Zucchini Safari F1 I grew this variety for the first time last year and it is now my favourite zucchini. It is a most beautiful looking Zucchini, with dark green cream striped fruit, and a prolific producer of excellent flavoured fruit. I plant seed in the garden in November or in the poly house during September. Three or four plants will keep a family of four happy for several months from early summer until April. 10 seeds $4.00 21 Pollen-free Sunflowers Ice Spray is lemon yellow with a green centre 25 seeds $5.00 These are the results of many years of hard work from an Australian flower breeder. He has finally been able to spare some seed for Lambley to sell to home gardeners. Until now all his seed has been sold to commercial cut flower growers. The big advantage that the pollen-free flowers have over traditional sorts is that they last much longer when picked. Each flower also lasts much longer in the garden than older varieties. The following are all branching varieties. If you want them for cut flowers then nip out the leader when it reaches 25cm in height. If you want a fine garden plant let it grow naturally giving it about 60cm space. They all grow from 150 to 180cm tall depending on soil conditions. I generally plant sunflower seed from November until January but October wouldn’t be too early and in warmer gardens September. They don’t need a lot of water and are happiest in full sun. Calypso Spray has medium sized flowers with lemon-peach petals and dark centres. 25 seeds $5.00 Mauve Spray has mauve-purple petals and a dark centre. 25 seeds $6.00 Garnet has tawny petals tipped with orange-yellow and a dark central boss. 25 seeds $5.00 Sonnet has purple centres with orangeyellow petals with a tawny ring. 25 seeds $5.00 22 Annuals flowering at Lambley Amaranthus (Love-lies-bleeding) Emerald Tassels. The most effective way I’ve grown this was as a backdrop to lime green Zinnias and a greenish white sunflower. In good soil it will grow 160cm tall by 80cm wide. The long green tassels are produced from mid-summer until late autumn. 100 seeds $4.00 Amaranthus Opopeo (Love-lies-bleeding) This extraordinary variety of Love-lies-bleeding startles visitors to the vegetable garden every summer. The tassels are held upright rather than hanging. The deep purple-red flowers pick well as long as its leaves are pulled off before the flowers are put into a vase. It grows 160xcm tall by 80cm across in our garden. 100 seeds $4.00 Zinnia Benary’s Giant Lime It’s been hard in recent years to get the true strain of the green flowered Zinnia Envy. Recent German breeding has produced this terrific strain of giant double lime green flowers. I’ve grown this strain over the past few years and it has really excited gardeners who have seen it. It grows 40cm tall. The best if not the only way to grow Zinnias is to plant the seed into prepared beds straight into the garden. 30 seeds $4.00 Zinnia State Fair Mix A grand giant flowered mixture of all the Zinnia colours except lime green. This strain will grow up to 90cm tall and is a very good cut flower. I don’t ever plant the seed of these in the garden until mid-November as they don’t like cold wet soils. They love the heat of summer and I can pick many bunches every week. Every summer until she died I used to send a bunch of Zinnias nearly every week to Margaret Olley. She called one of her paintings “David’s Zinnias”. 50 seeds $4.00 23 Perennials continued Miscanthus transmorrisonensis Evergreen Feather Grass The most beautiful of all the Miscanthus with evergreen leaves making 80cm tall by 100cm wide fountain-like mounds. The arching, almost weeping flower heads, displayed well above the foliage, are produced from summer until midwinter. Fabulous plant. Sun. Needs some space to show off its beautiful form. 150cm x 140cm. We always sell out of this grass. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Origanum ‘Santa Cruz’ We have quite a good collection of ornamental Oreganos and each one is worth a place in the dry garden (I’m going to have to make the garden bigger to find a spot for them all). Origanum ‘Santa Cruz’ makes a low evergreen carpet from which twiggy stems carry, during late summer and autumn, arching sprays of quietly beautiful dusky pink hop like flower heads. A tough, sun loving and drought tolerant plant. 30cm x 40cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Penstemon ‘Alice Hindley’ One of my favourite Penstemon with the loveliest blue-mauve white throated flowers beautifully poised on long pedicels. Flowering as it does from late spring until winter it has been a mainstay of our double borders for many years. Penstemon are tough plants with very little artificial water requirements. It’s a mistake to cut them back too hard in winter, about half way is safe. We remove old spent stems when the new spring growth gets to 30cm or so. 90cm x 90cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 24 Penstemon ‘Mother of Pearl’ Penstemons are easily grown sun loving perennials with few wants except dead heading and the removal of old spent stems in mid-spring. Penstemon ‘Mother of Pearl’ has fabulous flowers, pale mauve blue, blush and white with purple internal veining. 60 x 60cm $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Penstemon virgatus ssp virgatus Wandbloom Penstemon We grew plants of this easy to grow species from seed collected in Coconino County in Arizona (the Grand Canyon is in this county). It produces its 40cm tall, tightly packed stems of mauve-blue flowers for much of the warmer months. This evergreen is small enough for the rock garden and showy enough to win a prize place in other parts. 40cm by 40cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Phlomis ‘Edward Bowles’ A fine new hybrid Phlomis, a cross between P. fruticosa and P. russelliana, which combines the best properties of both its parents making a low evergreen, handsome foliaged shrub which carries metre tall leafy flowering stems carrying whorls of yellow clawed flowers in a candelabra like effect. Tough drought tolerant sun lover. 120cm tall by 100cm wide. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 25 Phlomis purpurea x crinita This new import is, to my mind, the most beautiful in foliage of all the Phlomis. It hasn’t flowered here yet, although it will do so this spring, and it is still such a new plant that our supplier, Olivier Filippi, hasn’t yet listed it in his catalogue. It has made a handsome, evergreen shrub a metre or so tall by nearly as much across in a year. The large felt-like leaves are silver grey on the upper surface and whitish grey beneath. 120cm by 120cm. Limit of one per order $15.00 Salvia leucophylla ‘Bees Bliss’ A fast growing groundcover with aromatic silver-grey foliage. Growth is in horizontal layers topped with lavender blue flowers in spring. It is widely used in Californian gardens both private and public because its foliage so densely covers the soil. I’ve planted it under pencil pines and in one season it has covered a metre of garden. Plant in full sun and water sparingly once established. 60cm x 200cm $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Salvia forskaohlei Black Sea Woodland Sage We first got seed of this 20 odd years ago from an Archibald collection in woodland near the Turkish Black Sea Coast. We grow it in quite dense dry shade under olive trees and next to a privet hedge. It has large handsome leaves in a loose rosette. During spring and early summer 70cm tall wands carry large deep mauve-blue flowers each with beautiful white lip markings. One of the best plants for dry shade. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 26 Salvia nemorosa ‘Kate Glenn’ Kate Glenn Meadow Sage This hybrid between Salvia nemorosa ssp tesquicola and Salvia ‘Wesuwe’ popped up in our dry garden a couple of years ago. It has the early flowering habit and dark flowers of the latter and the showy bracts of the former. A terrific plant which I named for my daughter. Tough, sun loving, drought tolerant and beautiful. $10.00 each or 3 for $27.00 Salvia nemorosa ‘Lubecca’ Salvia ’Lubecca’ is one of the smallest and neatest growing of the nemorosa types of salvia making 30cm tall spikes of rich violet-blue flowers during spring, summer and autumn. We cut it to the ground after the first flush of flowers are spent to get a good second autumn flowering. It needs cutting back again during winter. Like all of its kin Salvia ‘Lubecca’ is a sun loving drought tolerant plant. 30cm x 30cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Salvia x sylvestris ‘Lye End’ Jeremy Francis, who with his wife Valerie, gardens at Cloude Hill in the Dandenongs, imported this variety about 25 years ago. It was raised by the English gardener, Miss Poole, and named for her garden, Lye End. Taller than most of its kind at 120 cm it carries long spikes of ghostly lavender blue flowers from spring into the summer and beyond if dead headed. Happy in any sunny well drained spot it needs very little water.120cm x 90cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 27 Salvia sclarea ‘Archibald’s Form’ Archibald’s Clary Sage We offer a superb form of the Clary Sage collected by Jim and Jenny Archibald in the Taurus mountains of Turkey about 25 years ago. It makes a mound of large, rough grey-green leaves which support enormous columns of lilac hooded white lipped flowers surrounded by large bracts of pink, white and green. Although short lived, a few self-sown seedlings are generally produced. It is an essential part of our dry garden. 120cm x 75cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Santolina magonica This is the first Australian release of this plant which we imported last year from Olivier Filippi’s famous nursery in the south of France. It makes a round evergreen shrub with leaves like little silver cotton wool buds. I haven’t seen it in flower yet but it has yellow buttons opening from lemon green buds. Happy in any sunny spot and takes the dry well. 50cm by 50cm. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Sisyrinchium striatum Satin Flower A member of the Iris family from Chile this plant is happy here in a sunny spot in the dry garden. S. striatum makes clumps of upright blue-green sword shaped leaves with stiff upright stems carrying soft lemon yellow flowers during late spring and early summer. I pull the old foliage off during winter and allow the odd self sown seedling to take the place of older clumps occasionally. 90cm x 60cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 28 Stachys thirkei Miniature Lamb’s Ears This beautiful little plant will suit areas in the garden where the typical Lamb’s Ears would grow too big. It has the usual felted silver Lamb’s Ear leaf but is smaller in all its parts than the type and there is no time during the summer when it looks scruffy. Drought tolerant and sun loving. Foliage mounds make10cm x 30cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 Stipa gigantea Giant Golden Oats Grass We’ve finally built up good quantities of this ornamental grass which, when flowering in late spring and early summer, is the most dramatically beautiful of all with 210cm tall wands carrying huge heads of golden oat-like flowers over low tussocks of evergreen leaves. The mature heads are good throughout the summer and autumn. 210cm x 90cm. $12.00 each or 3 for $33.00 Symphytum lilacinum Dwarf Comfrey Finding plants which do well in tough shady positions is always a challenge. Symphytum lilacinum grows well here under a Washington Thorn and close to a hungry privet hedge. This perennial forms evergreen clumps of rather rough, largish green leaves. During spring pale mauve, pink flushed bells are held, many to a stem, well above the foliage. Easy to grow and doesn’t need much water when once established. 30cm x 40cm. $8.00 each or 3 for $21.00 29 Tanacetum corymbosum White Flowered Tansy A plant of open grasslands of southern Europe it makes evergreen basal rosettes of dark green, much dissected leaves. Quite early in the spring stiff leafy stems, up to a metre in height once established, carry wide heads of white daisies. It will repeat flower with us several times in the season if spent flower stems are removed. A fine tough sun loving drought tolerant plant. 100cm x 60cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Thymus pseudolanguinosus Woolly Thyme This “The wooliest of all the thymes” makes a dense, short carpet of tiny grey leaves. During summer it has masses of small pink flowers pressed against the foliage. We grow it in a hot dry sunny position. It is happy in the rock garden or spilling over stone walls. 5cm tall by 60cm across. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Thymus coccineus Carmine Creeping Thyme A carpeting thyme with deep carminepink flowers in spring. It has made a mat of dark green leaves about 80cm across in two years here. During its spring flowering period it is quite enchanting. When not in flower it makes a good evergreen groundcover for any sunny well drained spot in the garden. 5cm by 80cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 30 Thymus ‘Westmoreland’ When I was younger, in fact 45 years younger, I maintained an Edna Walling designed garden in Melbourne. The garden was really well made and the stone work was brilliant. (I found out later that the stone work had been done by Ellis Stone.) In the garden, Edna Walling had planted this little thyme. It makes a low growing, long lived shrub with tiny aromatic leaves. During summer each stem carries clear pink, many flowered heads for a good six weeks. 30cm by 50cm. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Veronica austriaca ‘Kapitan Speedwell’ A friend imported this plant a good 25 years ago. Veronica ‘Kapitan’ makes prostrate green mats which, during spring, throw up 20cm spikes of deep gentian blue flowers. In England it’s thought of as a dry garden plant but we find it needs watering about once a fortnight during hot dry weather. 20cm x 30cm. Sun or light shade. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 Viola cornuta A perennial species of Viola which weaves its way through our borders covering many a bare spot from early spring until autumn with its lilac, long faced pansy flowers. As other perennials grow around and over this Viola it will scramble up through to the light. A plant from hot hillsides in what used to be called Yugoslavia it is much more sun and heat tolerant than the bedding violas which give up at the first blast of hot weather. $9.00 each or 3 for $24.00 31 32