Desperate to know what it is...

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by Fernie, Aug 9, 2011.

  1. Fernie

    Fernie Apprentice Gardener

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    Hi all...
    I've been wanting to know what this tree/bush is ever since I saw it in bloom at Haddon Hall in Derbyshire.
    Each time I go I try to get another seed pod ( I successfully germinated a seed once but it died after a few months ) or look for the id tag.
    When I went again this Sunday I took my camera and got some close shots. They have given it a serious pruning since last year and it seems to have given it a boost.
    The flower, when it's out, is the most amazing thing: bright red and like a firework ! The seed pod is black and about the size of a (chunky) mangetout.
    . anyone know?:what:
     

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  2. Silver surfer

    Silver surfer PLANTAHOLIC

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    Reminds me of a Paeonia sp. Common name Peony.
    The leaves can be extremely varied depending on which species it is.
    Maybe a Tree Paeonia......Paeonia delavayi perhaps?

    http://www.winsfordwalledgarden.com/data/images/Garden Flowers/Paeonia_delavayi.jpg

    http://www.winsfordwalledgarden.com/planting.aspx?Page=Paeonia

    See 18 detailed images in 3rd link.

    http://www.plantdatabase.co.uk/Delavayi_Peony

    paeonia red flowers - Google Search

    http://www.google.co.uk/search?um=1...29969l0l33250l10l9l0l0l0l2l219l1407l2.4.3l9l0
     
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    • davygfuchsia

      davygfuchsia Gardener

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      I would think a Tree Paeonia ..

      Dave
       
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      • stumorphmac

        stumorphmac cymbidist

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        It looks like Peaony lutea to me (yellow flowers)
         
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        • Fernie

          Fernie Apprentice Gardener

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        • Bilbo675

          Bilbo675 Total Gardener

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          Going off on a tangent for a moment - Winsford Walled Garden is within an Angling complex in Devon where I used to go on holiday; my mum and dad are there now....small world :D
           
        • pete

          pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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          Are you sure Fernie???
          Thats a bit tropical

          Your pics look like a tree peony to me also:scratch:
           
        • Silver surfer

          Silver surfer PLANTAHOLIC

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          Sorry Fernie. It is definitely not Jatropha multifida.
          Your leaf is very different from Jatropha multifida. This has leaflets that radiate from a central point at the end of the stalk.

          http://floridagardener.com/pom/jatropha_multifidia.jpg

          It has many small flowers on a single head.

          http://www.flickr.com/photos/47108884@N07/4435268109/in/set-72157623518888471

          The seed pods are round.

          Google Images

          It is as Pete says a plant of hot tropical countries.


          Why not send an e mail to the head gardener at Haddon with a link to this thread.

          http://www.haddonhall.co.uk/contactus.htm
           
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          • Fernie

            Fernie Apprentice Gardener

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            Dear all....

            I thank you most kindly for your suggestions - and correct information! :love30:

            I spoke to a lovely lady at Haddon Hall this morning who informed me that the plant I have coveted for years is indeed a tree peony.
            She said it is the Ludlowii version, stating it's yellow, but I know it was red when I saw it.. so found the red one is a x version: the P. delavayi x lutea. ( or Paeonia x handel-mazzettii according to Summit Perennials Peonies

            HTML:
            also known as (P. delavayi x lutea) Common names: Species Tree Peony. A shrub of very long lifespan. Height: to 3ft, and 3ft wide. Plants from seed wild-collected by Halda near Habashan, Yunnan, China at 3200m in mixed Abies-Rhododendron forest. Small bushes. This would seem to be a natural hybrid between the species delavayi (dark red flowers) and lutea (yellow flowers). Hardiness may be a questionmark at this point; they have been hardy for me here, but have yet to show a flower bud. Recommended site: open shade. Foliage coarse; leaf segment widths between the narrow delavayii and the broader lutea. Large solitary flowers are borne for about a week in late spring, bronze-yellow in the literature, but bright red on the plants which flowered here this year: part of the natural variation of this hybrid species?, or a hybrid of the hybridspecies? I don't know. At any rate, the red is nice and bright and maybe a better colour than was expected. Some uses: Accent, in Shrubbery, Specimens, Rock Gardens, Naturalizing.
             
          • Silver surfer

            Silver surfer PLANTAHOLIC

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            I am so pleased that Haddon Hall have been so helpful.
            Thanks for getting back to us all.
             
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