The last few days have been dry - and this plant is feeling a bit old. Many plants droop a bit when their flowers are turning to seed. (It was in shade when I went to take it's picture before.) |
It's only recently that I've noticed how wonderful each individual Ribwort plant is. It has shape and poise. It's usually buried in grass but with space around it . . well, why doesn't everyone have one?
Like Hollyhocks and Foxgloves, the flowers work their way upwards so you get to see the seeds forming, the white stamens with their prominent anthers and the un-opened bits all on the same stem. |
Now I'd like to recommend Ribwort as a plant to grow at the edge of a flower border - with plenty of space around it so its flowers and seed heads can lean elegantly and its leaves stand erect or splay around as they please. Daffodils - well, their flowers are wonderful but their leaves have little to commend them. And as for shape - well, they are nothing but stalks with trumpets on top. Ribwort, in contrast, is a plant of completeness. You wouldn't want to put its flowers in a vase and you wouldn't want to pick its leaves to pad out a display . . . but you might want to stand back and admire it on its own, where it is and with all its elements intact. Like a beautiful human. The person you most admire might have fantastic arms but you are unlikely to want to cut one off and use it as a centre-piece for your dinner party table. Some things just aren't the same when cut off.
One of the things I find difficult about Street Plant Posts is that it's sometimes hard to get a good angle on plants without including number plates so although I came across a Ribwort Plant growing on its own through pebbles, with a space cleared around it so its full shape could be seen - well, I would have felt too intrusive to have taken its picture. Plants in the gutter aren't too bad to take photos of (as long as you don't get your legs run over.
The result, then, is that for all that I'm commending it to you, I can't show it to its best advantage. However, of all the photos on this post, this is my favourite and I'm currently using it as my desktop picture. (You can try it if you like.)
I'm not sure how easy it is to grow from seed but for many of us in the UK it's easy to come across so it's worth a try.
As for proper information . . . anything I could say would simply re-hash what can be read on the internet so I'll offer some links rather than waffle about and pretend I know more than I do!
Wild Flower Guide - Look for Ribwort Plantain in the index down the right hand side. 'Plantain Family' is another interesting one to click.
Nature Gate
Easy Wildflowers
Garden Organic
Emorsgate Seeds - someone actually sells Ribwort seeds!
Nature Spot
The Wildlife Trusts
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And completely irrelevantly - Butterfly Conservation is raising money by inviting you to take part in an auction to sponsor a moth species and have your name printed with it in The Atlas of Britain and Ireland's Larger Moths. Whether or not you'd like to be a moth benefactor, do take a look at this site because the photos of the moths in their 'auction' (it's alright, they're not selling dead and dusty creatures on tall pins) are delightful.
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One of the troubles with wind is that it makes plants wobble so my photos aren't good enough to peer into to see what this looks like . . . however . . . wandering off at a tangent to find out about the book itself I found this interesting and honest explanation on Amazon about the problems in re-producing a book originally published before 1923. I don't know what's significant about the magic date 1923 but . . . one goes, bee-like, from one place to the next . . . ! (I'll resist.)
4 comments:
Fabulous post. I chuckled throughout. And I am with you wholeheartedly on the beauty of plantain: ribwort, Hoary and greater. We have them everywhere in our garden. The flowers are greatly underestimated- one really needs to look at them closely to apreciate their magnificence. Good for you for highlighting it x
I am sure once anyone has one they will have many, as happened to me. They are so underrated as are many of our native wild species of flowers and grass. When we were children we used to shoot Plantain by wrapping the stem around the ripened seed head and 'shooting' it off {a novel, if not vandalistic, way of spreading the seeds for sure} I am sure someone used to chew the leaves of this plant, ribs removed, but would not recommend that!
I believe I contracted a case of ribwort during an extended stay in the tropics.
Very interesting stuff! The smarter I get, the more I realize that I know so little about many subjects. Plants are one of them...
Well, I always try to stick up for the under dog. However, back in Scotland, I wont have to cope with bindweed, hooray!
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