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After last week’s post, where I showed you the large-flowered aster I’d like to buy, I decided to show a couple of the asters already in my garden. To be honest, there’s not much other than asters (Michaelmas daisies) left in flower in the garden now. I have several and they’re all providing an uplifting display of colour that helps to combat the sometimes grey days of autumn.
These are two short-growing cultivars. The pink one at the top is ‘Alpha Light Pink’, but the identity of the blue one below is a mystery to me now. (I try to write down the names of the plants I buy, but don’t always remember.) We have a similar plant elsewhere, named ‘Audrey’, but I expect it to be a bit taller than this one. (This one is only about 30cm, Audrey can grow to 50cm.)
Trying to keep track of plant names isn’t easy, but is impossible when friends give you the generous gift of a name-unknown plant from their garden. There must be much-loved plants in gardens everywhere that have been passed around but their cultivar names either forgotten or mistaken for something else. (I have a couple of very pretty taller asters, both given to me by friends, but no idea of their names.)
However, it gets even more difficult when the powers that be decide to change a well-know name for something difficult to say, and usually all but impossible to spell. In this case, many Aster cultivars have become Symphyotrichum – yes, I had to look that one up for the spelling! But it’s more complicated than that. Checking on the RHS site, I read that the Aster genus is now divided into several: Aster, Callistephus, Eurybia, Kalimeris, and Symphyotrichum. Thankfully, they use the common name aster for all!
Does it really matter if the name of a plant is hard to pronounce, is overly complicated, or gets forgotten? Perhaps not so much in the garden, if it’s happy with where it’s growing and it looks good. It does matter when you want to enable someone else to buy the same plant, or to be able to check important details like the size of the plant or its preferred growing conditions. In future I’ll try to keep a better record of plant names, even if it’s just for labelling my photographs and writing this blog!



















