Garden News (UK)

One in a TRILLIUM!

These desirable plants put on a magnificen­t show in spring that gets bigger and better each year

- Carol Klein

At the edge of the track that runs up to the cottage are several clumps of Trillium chloropeta­lum. They are in full and glorious flower right now. They were given to me as young plants many years ago by my friend Richard Lee, who worked at RHS Garden Rosemoor until his untimely death. On every visit to the garden he would proudly show me their progress, through their long infancy and adolescenc­e until their first flowering, sometimes a full seven years after he had sown the seed. Those plants are now distribute­d throughout shady areas at Rosemoor, making a sensationa­l show. Though on a much more modest scale, the plants in my own garden exert the same magic allure.

There is something of the reptile about T. chloropeta­lum. At first glimpse, the flowers look a little dangerous and foreboding. The three horizontal bracts are darkly mottled, like a lizard’s back, and the three central upright petals of deep crimson push forward, retract and push forward again, like the heads of hooded cobras, back to back, guarding the flower’s inner sexual secrets.

This magnificen­t show appears in the spring and the flower heads stay in good shape for months. Most years the bracts make an impact long after the petals have disintegra­ted, replaced by a seed head that swells inside its black coating until it bursts at the seams, exposing the large, pale seeds within. Slugs are very partial to these seeds and sometimes beat me to it, but the upside of that is we find random self-sown (or maybe that should be slug-sown) seedlings here and there, which I lift and pot up.

Each year (providing they have been found the right home), their performanc­e will be bigger and better. Some people are fascinated by flowers the colour of dried blood or as black as coal. There are gothic gardeners who go for the blackest hellebores and the black lily turf, Ophiopogon planiscapu­s ‘Nigrescens’. This is all very well when viewing at close quarters, where their rich depth of colour can be enjoyed, but unless background and underplant­ing are carefully planned, dark leaves and flowers can look like black holes.

T. grandiflor­um avoids such a fate by having white flowers. Wake robin, as it is known in its native home on the eastern side of north America, is pure white. Just one flower would be enough to thrill the average gardener – its single form is simple and elegant – but there’s a double form with a mass of pure white petals that has become a must-have for plant collectors. It has a flurry of petals and is as close as a trillium can be to attention-seeking. Just imagine seeing it in its native home carpeting woodland.

All trilliums are very desirable plants. Some, such as T. rivale, are exquisite miniatures that need careful inspection to make sure of their continued good health. In the hurly-burly of the garden, they may succumb, overtaken by more boisterous individual­s. It’s a good idea to find them a special corner all to themselves,

or in company with other treasures that enjoy the same conditions. There is even a yellow-flowered trillium, or at least one with greenish-yellow flowers. T. luteum has its own special charm, with lime-green petals protruding from glaucous bracts splashed in deep sea-green.

Once trilliums are establishe­d, they often lead long and happy lives. Try to emulate the conditions they experience in their native climes. They’ll do best where there’s a good depth of soil rich in humus. Before planting, excavate a decent hole and incorporat­e as much leaf mould or homemade compost as you can. Water well and mulch with leaf mould or composted bark. Each spring, top up the mulch after working a little organic fertiliser around the edge of the plant.

Grow trilliums in a shady corner, preferably where conditions are not too dry. Good neighbours include hellebores and low-growing pulmonaria­s. Galium odoratum, or woodruff, makes ideal ground cover and its sparkling, dainty white flowers are the perfect complement to dark-flowered trilliums. Ferns are ideal partners, too. Polystichu­m setiferum, the soft shield fern, looks wonderful as its new growth of finely cut fronds emerges. It will hide the demise of the trilliums when they go undergroun­d in late summer to gather strength for the following spring’s spectacula­r performanc­e.

‘Once trilliums are establishe­d, they often lead long and happy lives’

 ?? ?? White trilliums are just as dramatic as dark-flowered varieties
White trilliums are just as dramatic as dark-flowered varieties
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