Manawatu Standard

Tips for picking ravishing rebels

There’ s nothing wrong with foraging for pretty weeds, you just need to be diligent in what you collect,

- writes Juliaatkin­son-dunn. Julia Atkinson-dunn is a creator and founder of Studio Home. For more informatio­n, see @studiohome­gardening or studiohome.co.nz.

Some of the first plants I could identify were the weeds on our farm, such as broom, gorse and the common white yarrow that lined the long driveway each summer. I learnt the difference between a scotch thistle and a nodding thistle early on, with the latter being my parents’ dedicated target for eradicatio­n every year.

What I hadn’t really clocked though was that weeds were, of course, just like any other flowering plants, sub-species falling into the categories of annual and perennial – terms more common at the garden centre than in the back paddock.

Weedy rebels are just a lot more enthusiast­ic than their more refined cousins.

Last year, I fell into the book Wild about Weeds:

Garden Design with Rebel Plants, by United Kingdom landscape designer Jack Wallington. It proved to be an eye-opener.

A weird side-effect of learning about plants for my own garden was now I saw all plants everywhere and this book provided an opening for more learning. I was interested to see that so many of the plants he profiled as ‘‘weeds’’ in the UK, were here, living as weeds too.

Essentiall­y, aweed can be defined as a ‘‘plant growing in the wrong place’’. In my extensive trawling for informatio­n about my local finds, I was also reminded that weeds can be invasive plants that threaten environmen­ts and compete with native species.

It’s strange to understand that our annoying weeds are, of course, native to other lands where they live in self-controlled and welcome existence.

Unfortunat­ely, our climate is so appealing to many of them that, on introducti­on, they lost the plot and aimed for nationwide domination, finding themselves landing on our noxious list and providing many a fulltime job for those charged with killing them. A particular­ly noble endeavour for those trying to unchoke our riverbeds from broom and rid hillsides from wilding pines.

This book fed my hunger for plant identifica­tion in a new way, giving road trips and street wanders a different focus in challengin­g me to name the colour that flashed by. Plants I can’t identify I then investigat­e, getting lost in the Massey University weeds database, and slowly adding to my understand­ing of the rogues that grow wild, welcome or not.

On the sliding scale of ‘‘noxious to wild’’, many are not as problemati­c, just potentiall­y out of place, escaping the bounds of their intended plot. I find it interestin­g to note their hardiness when compared to the endless failures of plants I have in my own garden, despite all the loving care they get. Wild plants tend to be experts at self-seeding, deep root systems and long flowering periods, all helpful for survival against all odds.

In my research, I have been fascinated to find some lapses in common identifica­tion.

A great example of this is the commonly referred to ‘‘blue borage’’ that waves from stony roadsides around the country. This is, in fact, called viper’s bugloss and is a spiky cousin of the herb.

Another rabbit hole I fell down was the identifica­tion of ‘‘cat’s ear’’. A happy yellow flowering plant that I would almost certainly have just thought was a dandelion. Dandelions have just the single flower atop a stem, whereas the other has branched stems with multiple flowers. After much leaf comparing, I also discovered that aside from cat’s ear, there is hawksbeard and hawksbit in the family and at home throughout the country.

On an eager foraging mission a few years ago, I collected great arms of what I thought was Queen Anne’s lace from a rural roadside, only to get an urgent message from a friend when spotting it on Instagram asking if it was hemlock. This was a lucky save, as I had never thought to note the difference. I got lucky that time as hemlock is particular­ly toxic, and not something to be dragged into the house for decoration. It is identified by the distinct purple blotches on its smooth stems, while Queen Anne’s lace is green and hairy. Queen

Anne’s lace also has a single dark purple flower in the centre of its flat topped bloom, while hemlock doesn’t and its umbellifer flower heads are more rounded.

What I assumed were oxide daisies in the gravel pathway by Christchur­ch’s Avon River was actually stinking mayweed, only obviously different to me from scentless chamomile after much sniffing. There is also a stand of pale blue chicory I visit on my bike rides and I noted that it, and the lush streams of red clover about the place were actually a common agricultur­al crop. Red clover is also a respected cover crop for farmers and gardeners with its ability to fix nitrogen and protect soil.

On my bike cruising of the river loop, I found common yarrow weaving through the long grass, at one point a pink toned patch of it. Sweet smelling and tall reaching bushes of buddleia were dotted around too, as were impressive looking stands of purple loosestrif­e at the river’s edge. Knowing the determinat­ion of its garden cousin, it no doubt wouldn’t be easy to get rid of in the wild.

On a drive into North Canterbury, I marvelled at the beauty of the sea of tall pink mallow in a salesyard, and later sidled my car off the road in streaming holiday traffic to cut vines of the perennial, wild broad-leaved sweet pea.

Honestly, that is one beautiful plant!

On our trip south from Canterbury to Otago, the roadside was dotted with the spikes of biennial woolly mullein and moth mullein with their distinctiv­e yellow flowers, similar in form to the garden varieties of verbascum. These weedy species eagerly pop up after ground is disturbed.

Lupins, foxgloves and yarrow (achillea) are great examples of rebel plants with a foot in both camps. The hardy varieties love nothing more than some thankless bony ground, providing a show in summer, but with problemati­c, invasive spread. In turn, their refined cousins are purchased for good money at the garden centre and revered as flowering centrepiec­es in gardens.

So, the next time you are out for a walk or drive, take a second look at the flashes of colour catching your eye. These are foreign rebels with names, sometimes with brilliant uses, but most often are up to no good. If you feel the need for a quick forage, just be diligent in what you collect.

Ideally, pick stems that are in flower but have not yet formed any seedheads, which greatly limits the potential of you spreading them any further.

 ?? JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN ?? A foraged arrangemen­t of Canterbury rebels.
JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN A foraged arrangemen­t of Canterbury rebels.
 ??  ?? Wild broad-leaved sweet pea is a beautiful plant.
Wild broad-leaved sweet pea is a beautiful plant.
 ??  ?? Buddleia are sweet smelling, tall reaching invasive weeds.
Buddleia are sweet smelling, tall reaching invasive weeds.

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