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IN THE GARDEN LIFE'S TRUE WALLFLOWERS MAKE A BOLD STATEMENT.


Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN

If you look up wallflower wallflower, Mediterranean perennial (Cheiranthus cheiri) of the family Cruciferae (mustard family), particularly popular in Europe, where it flourishes on old walls.  in Webster's dictionary, you will find this definition: "A person who from shyness or unpopularity remains on the sidelines On the sidelines

An investor who decides not to invest due to market uncertainty.


on the sidelines

Of or relating to investors who, having assessed the market, have decided to avoid committing their funds.
 of a social activity (as a dance)."

It turns out that wallflowers, in a gardener's lexicon, have been ironically named since they are anything but shy, making quite a statement among those perennials that flower in a most uninhibited and ostentatious manner.

If they do not actually dance, wallflowers bloom practically without interruption until they die, metabolically exhausted by their insistence on pushing out flowers nonstop.

The most stunning wallflower is a variety known as Erysimum linifolium 'Bowles Mauve.' The color of its flower is somewhere in the lilac to lavender-pink spectrum, and it can grow in sunny to lightly shaded exposures. It forms a symmetrical mound with nothing but flowers visible when it blooms full throttle in the spring, and then persists for a few years, flowering on and off in all seasons.

English wallflowers (Erysimum cheiri) appear in yellow, orange, red or burgundy and are mildly fragrant. Strictly speaking, they are also perennials but, in hot summer Valley gardens, they look their best for only one growing season. Wallflowers have a modest stature of about 2 feet and combine well with other brightly flowered perennials such as Marguerite daisies and the deep-purple flowered, nearly black-leafed and pleasantly scented heliotrope heliotrope (hē`lēətrōp') [Gr.,=sun-turning] or turnsole, name for any plant that turns to face the sun, especially members of the genus Heliotropium of the family Boraginaceae.  (Heliotropium arborescens 'Black Beauty').

A plant worth combining with wallflowers, Marguerites and heliotropes is the strawflower strawflower, garden annual (Helichrysum bracteatum) of the family Asteraceae (aster family), a favorite as an everlasting but also grown for its fresh flowers. The plant is native to Australia.  (Helichrysum Helichrysum

genus in the plant family Asteraceae; in southern Africa H. argyrosphaerum contains an unidentified toxin which causes blindness and paresis resulting from degenerative lesions in the brain. In Australia H.
 bracteatum). Available in pink, dark pink, red, salmon, gold, yellow and white, strawflowers are daisies that have an almost artificial look due to their papery, strawlike consistency.

To keep them for everlasting bouquets, detach strawflowers from the stem when they have just begun to open. Hang them upside down in a protected, dark, airy location. Strawflowers open fully as they dry and can last for a year or more without losing their color.

Several outstanding, long-blooming selections for the spring garden belong to the snapdragon family. Toadflax toadflax: see figwort.  or baby snapdragon (Linaria) is the most charming of the bunch, occurring in solid or bicolor bicolor

a coat color of two colors. In dogs, usually black with tan markings but may be other combinations such as ticking on a white background. In cats, more than two spots of color on the body, either white and one basic color, or white with one tabby color.
 varieties of pink, rose, mauve, red, burgundy and gold.

Nemesia Nemesia can be:
  • a genus of plant in the family Scrophulariaceae
  • a spider genus in the Nemesiidae family.
, also multicolored, rivals toadflax for charm, but tends to disappear when summer comes. Finally, monkey flowers (Mimulus
For the crab genus, see Mimulus (crab).
Mimulus is also an OpenWetWare community for Mimulus biology .
''Monkey-flower and variants redirect here.
) come in both annual and perennial forms and, as the years pass, are available in an increasingly wide spectrum of colors.

Following a recent column on Mycorrhizae Mycorrhizae

Dual organs of absorption that are formed when symbiotic fungi inhabit healthy absorbing organs (roots, rhizomes, or thalli) of most terrestrial plants and many aquatics and epiphytes.
, the fungi that live in beneficial symbiosis with plant roots, I had the opportunity to speak with John Keller, research director of Monrovia Growers.

Monrovia produces millions of container plants each year, and Mycorrhizae are added to the nursery's soil mixes. Keller said that Mycorrhizae do not necessarily make plants grow larger, but rather, they are a kind of insurance policy since there is no telling what kind of soil will be provided for plants after they leave the nursery.

In poor soil, Mycorrhizae could be the difference between a plant succumbing to stress and its survival since Mycorrhizae assist roots in absorption of water and minerals. A study at Texas A&M also demonstrated that Mycorrhizae improve the efficiency of mineral uptake by roots. In this regard, it is both economically and environmentally sensible to use Mycorrhizae in soil mixes since, by doing so, less fertilizer will be leached through the container soil.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:556
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