The Timaru Herald

The garden’s beautiful umbrellas

Find the silver lining when your parsley, celery or coriander bolts this summer, says Julia Atkinson-Dunn.

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As a never-ever grower, learning to garden feels like a giant undertakin­g. Too much to learn, too much to retain, too much to be bothered with. But once the bug has a grip on you and the wins start to outweigh the misses, you will discover the total delight of curation.

Picking and choosing which plants you’d like to plough your effort into, and enabling what specimens you want to enjoy each season is truly rewarding – visually and emotionall­y.

Looking beyond colour to also explore shape and form is where you get to experiment and discover your green-thumbed creativity.

As you learn, you’ll find combinatio­ns you love, appreciati­ng plants for their foliage and blooms, right through to their seed heads.

One of my favourite forms to mix into my garden is the umbellifer, a flowering plant that belongs to the Apiaceae (celery) family.

With a membership of hundreds of genera and thousands of species, these plants are broadly characteri­sed by their flowers that develop as ‘‘umbels’’ (umbrella-like).

Bursting from the tip of a main stalk, small stems swoop upward, bearing tiny flowers that group together in a disc shape or sometimes slightly domed.

Perhaps the most common umbellifer­s in our New Zealand gardens are the bolting blooms of our carrot, celery, parsley, parsnip and coriander crops, as well as the towering heads of fennel, within bounds and roaming riverbeds in the wild.

Poisonous hemlock is in the mix there too, posing as the more loveable Queen Anne’s lace, as are the sturdy giant heads of roadside angelica.

Here are my favourites for garden and the vase.

Fennel

Fennel would be my ‘‘gateway’’ umbellifer. I introduced it before I had any real recognitio­n of the umbellifer family and, as a beginner, it quickly gave me the eager growth and blooms needed to raise my gardening confidence.

I grow the common perennial variety of Foeniculum vulgare, as opposed to Florence fennel with the edible bulb.

Maturing to lofty heights of nearly 2m with a bushy, bossy habit, I simply cut into the clump and thin it out during its most prolific growing season from spring into autumn. This allows other airy plants close by to weave through it and give the nice, wild feeling that I pursue.

With the knowledge that the plant will regenerate quickly, I harvest flowers liberally to enjoy inside. Fennel flowers are best picked when they are acid yellow/green or forming seeds to prevent wilting in the vase.

The remaining heads on the plant will develop and mature seeds that you can share with the birds, as well as harvest your pantry!

I give my plants a strong chop back as soon as its looking like the seeds are dropping, as I have learned from experience that they will likely get growing wherever they land.

Astrantia

In contrast to fennel, Astrantia is a delightful, delicate perennial umbellifer with starry flowers that bring light and interest to partly shaded areas. Commonly maturing to around 30-60cm over lovely fern-like foliage, varieties offer flowering options in a spectrum of plums through to white with dashes of green.

After a few years, I dig up and divide the clumps to create more plants with the excitement of enjoying further blooms from summer right through to late autumn. They have a terrific vase life and truly belong in every flower bed!

Parsley

I know that this might be a weird one, but its inclusion here is to help you find the silver lining in your parsley bolting to flower in the heat of summer.

My flat leaf and curly varieties have rewarded me with terrific little umbels that look sweet in the garden as well as performing incredibly well in a vase.

Perhaps don’t be so quick to cut blooming heads back this season, or at the very least, add them to mixed arrangemen­ts for quirky interest.

Ammi Majus

Arriving in gardens under many different monikers, including bishop’s flower and false Queen Anne’s lace, this is a beautiful cottage garden regular with large white, domed umbels.

Reaching up to 1.2m high with feathery green foliage, it brings a softness to the middle or back of sunny garden beds. It is a favourite for picking and dries well too.

Technicall­y an annual, in parts of New Zealand it might attempt to push through winter and into the following spring.

Orlaya

This is a magical, lacey umbellifer that I first saw thriving in the borders of Barewood Garden. In New Zealand, the most commonly available variety is Orlaya grandiflor­a ‘‘White Lace’’.

Orlaya is easily grown from seed and has a penchant for gentle self-seeding as it comes to the end of its cycle. This romantic little annual will grow to around 75cm high, given good sunlight.

I thoroughly enjoyed it in my garden last year and have my fingers crossed for some self-sown surprises.

It is a beautiful highlight within a mixed bed as much as it is in a mixed arrangemen­t with a rewarding vase life.

Julia Atkinson -Dunn is the writer and creative behind Studio Home. You can join her on @studiohome­gardening or studiohome.co.nz

 ?? ?? Ammi Majus features heavily in this mixed picking of flowers.
Ammi Majus features heavily in this mixed picking of flowers.
 ?? ?? Astrantia have a terrific vase life.
Astrantia have a terrific vase life.
 ?? ?? Astrantia and parsley flower in a mixed arrangemen­t
Astrantia and parsley flower in a mixed arrangemen­t
 ?? ?? Little green parsley flowers in an arrangemen­t.
Little green parsley flowers in an arrangemen­t.
 ?? ?? Orlaya grandiflor­a weave through a border.
Orlaya grandiflor­a weave through a border.

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