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Acaena inermis 'Purpurea'

Rosaceae
  acaena_inermis_purpurea.jpg
Acaena inermis 'Purpurea'
 

Habitat: open, sunny places

Flowering: summer

Height: 15 cm

Width: 30 cm

Soil: gritty, well drained

Coming from the southern hemisphere, these plants make mats of trailing stems, with small, rounded, serrated leaves, usually in interesting colours - grey-green, bronze or purplish. The flowers are on short upright stems, and are followed by the hooked seeds, which attach themselves to anything passing by.

Acaena inermis 'Purpurea' makes mats of amethyst foliage, which turn bright red if they are exposed to full sun. The flowers are creamy white, and the seeds do not have the little barbs that are usual in this genus, so it is less likely to spread spontaneously.
9 cm pot £3.00

acaena_magellanica_georgiaeaustralis.jpg Acaena magellanica subsp. georgiaeaustralis is very rarely offered. Somewhere in Whitehall there is a door labelled 'Government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands'. If you hear the inhabitants talking about the the South Georgia burr, they are not referring the the local accent. With just four permanent residents (which is four more than the South Sandwich Islands can muster), no accent has evolved. The burr is one of an extremely small number of flowering plants from this outpost of the Empire. The most prominent features of the wiry-stemmed plants are the burrs, heads of seeds, which in this case are a rich, chestnut brown. They are spread by adhering to the fur (or more likely feathers in South Georgia) of passers by, and can easily be collected from the socks of anyone who has been there. Is there nothing that we will not do to bring your interesting plants from far-flung places?