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Visitors to Fullers Mill can rely on it as a place to see unusual plants. Recently I saw these flowers of Arisaema candidissimum (AKA ‘Jack in the pulpit’ or cobra lily) there, growing in a shady space under some trees. This is the first time I’ve seen this particular plant, although I’ve previously seen a darker arisaema in this garden.
It’s an odd-looking flower, with a tubular, curved spathe that is striped with pink inside. (Sometimes they can be plain white inside.) The outside of the spathe has a subtle green stripe and the leaves are large, strongly veined, and a lush green, which gives the plant a very exotic, tropical look. I’ve read that the flowers have a sweet scent, but couldn’t get close enough to them to experience it for myself. (These photographs have had quite a bit of cropping.)
Arisaema is not a plant that I’m likely to try in my own garden, given that it prefers a rich soil with plenty of humus (although I am working on that one). It also needs reliable moisture and dappled shade (not much of either of those here). I could try to grow arisaema in pots, but I’d prefer not to have something that would resent drying out – it’s too hot here these days!
It’s good to be able to enjoy the sight of an unfamiliar plant when I’m out on a garden visit. Fuller’s Mill is a garden that has rather different conditions to mine, even though it’s not far away from us, so there’s always something that we can’t grow here.
(You can see the darker Arisaema in this post.)






















