Country Life

In the garden

- Mark Griffiths is editor of the New RHS Dictionary of Gardening Mark Griffiths

SOME 22 years have passed since the bamboo Borinda papyrifera (syn. Fargesia papyrifera) was introduced to British cultivatio­n from its native Yunnan. Over that time, it has proved hardy in all but the coldest and most exposed sites and comfortabl­e in sun or dappled shade on most moist, fertile and well-drained soils. Once the object of interminab­le-seeming waiting lists, it has at last become more readily obtainable.

All of which is just as well as none other of its tribe inspires such awe and longing among plant connoisseu­rs. I’ve seen it steal the hearts of even the most hardened bamboo-haters.

Forming a dense clump, it stands up to 25ft tall, a vision of verticalit­y save for its summits and boughs, which hang heavy with luxuriant foliage. Each achieving about 2½in in diameter, the canes are celadon to duck-egg blue and iced with white powder. For a while after they emerge, they’re made all the more brilliant by the large sheaths that clad them and which resemble fine papyrus on their exteriors and pearly origami paper within.

In its combinatio­n of ghostlines­s and majesty, B. papyrifera is a power plant, commanding a hallowed and sizeable space and a deservedly high price. However, it’s not the only beautifull­y pigmented bamboo to have come from China in recent decades. Others are easier to find and to use, being smaller and more companiona­ble in their colouring.

Fargesia Jiuzhaigou 1 is the best of several forms of Fargesia nitida discovered in Jiuzhaigou, a nature reserve in Sichuan. It makes a fountain-like clump to 8ft tall laden with small leaves that flicker with exquisite delicacy. As they age, its pea-stickslim canes turn from purpleshea­thed lime to ferrous red, carnelian and amber. Add to this its tolerance of pruning and shade and its dislike of harsh winds, and this is the perfect bamboo for beds and containers in small walled gardens and courtyards.

For more open sites, try F. scabrida Asian Wonder, which is tougher, more upright and larger, although still small (at most, 12ft tall) and decorous. Bloomed like red grapes and clothed with orange to cinnamon sheaths, the new canes amaze as they thrust through its willowy foliage—an effect I like to exploit by using it as an informal hedge, planted in a row, topdressed with gravel or pebbles, and trimmed from time to time.

Remarkable colours can also be found among bamboos that have long been available. In Semiarundi­naria fastuosa, the canes flush with rich plum. Sturdy and soaring, perfectly straight, to 20ft or more, they’re ruffed with foliage borne on short branches. Confined in a long narrow bed alongside a building or wall, these pillars of vegetation will keep to a single, evenly spaced line, becoming a marvel of rhythmic rectitude. In such sites, the canes can be cut to the desired height once they’ve hardened. Elsewhere and allowed to spread, they form screens that are imposing, but extraordin­arily elegant.

The most colourful canes of all are to be found in Phyllostac­hys: saffron in P. Allgold; jade-grooved and ruby-flushed sulphur in P. aureosulca­ta f. spectabili­s; tortoisesh­ell in P. Boryana; silvery aquamarine in P. glauca; jet black in P. nigra; aubergine turning to chestnutst­riped khaki in P. violascens. These are merely a sample of the Phyllostac­hys palette.

Although they can attain the stature of small trees, these will cope in large containers, but they are happier in the ground, where their rhizomes can wander and their canes expand from clump to grove. If necessary, their spread is easily contained by removing any straying shoots. Cutting out ageing canes (three years old or more) will make room for replacemen­ts and keep a grove airy.

Once the new canes have hardened, I prune the lower branches (up to chest height) to give a clear view of their form and colour. This is cosmetic rather than essential and applies only to Phyllostac­hys. One wouldn’t take the secateurs to B. papyrifera—no scope for perfection­ism there.

‘I’ve seen it steal the hearts of even the most hardened bamboo-hater

Next week: The joy of cyclamens

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 ??  ?? Raising cane: (From left to right) Phyllostac­hys nigra Henonis, Borinda papyrifera, P. aureosulca­ta f. spectabili­s and P. bambusoide­s Allgold
Raising cane: (From left to right) Phyllostac­hys nigra Henonis, Borinda papyrifera, P. aureosulca­ta f. spectabili­s and P. bambusoide­s Allgold

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