Cabbage Heads or Kales

James Joyce mentions the florin early into Ulysses, reason enough for Frank Delaney to tell us about the origin of the word in his exasperatingly brilliant Re:Joyce podcast. The ‘florin’ was first used and named in the Italian city of Florence, or Firenze, but according to Delaney the name refers to a flower rather than the city. The first coins, he says, bore a lily on one side. Continue reading

Alberta magna1 Natal flame lights up Melbourne summer

Alberta magna is a lonely species. It’s rare in its natural habitat and it’s been left isolated taxonomically after the rest of the species, all from Madagascar, were moved the mouthful of a genus, Razafimandimbisonia. The common name Natal Flame Bush pretty much sums up Alberta magna. It comes from ZwaZulu-Natal and the Easter Cape region of South Africa, it has flame coloured flowers (too intense for my camera to cope with) and it’s a bush or perhaps small tree. The alternative name Mountain Alberta is not so informative. Continue reading

Delicate blue flowers of Scilla madeirensis, the Giant Madeiran Squill Giant squill is simply delightful, Madeira

No I haven’t been to Madeira. But according to Greg Redwood, one of my colleagues here at Kew, I should go there rather than to (mainland) Portugal. This was in response to me listing the places in Europe Lynda and I had hoped to visit while on this side of the world. Oh, well. Next time. For now though I have the Madeirenese (I’m torn here between Madeiranese and Madeirenese – if only I’d studied Latin at school) flora to enjoy. And isn’t that the great thing about a botanic garden: you can visit the plant world without leaving home. Continue reading

Tim Entwisle Promenade plantée 1 Plant promenade in Paris

At 10 metres above the ground, maybe 10 metres wide, nearly 5 kilometres long, and packed with trees, shrubs and views of Parisian streets, the Promenade plantée is a trend setter and worth a look next time you are in town. OK, so it’s ranked 180th in Lonely Planet’s list of 1524 things to do in Paris, but then this is about my fifth visit to Paris and I like plants. Continue reading

Destroyed palm oil plantation forest [Photo: WWF] Palming off palm oil’s true cost

“…biodiversity loss in one of the world’s most biodiverse regions; land degradation…loss of ecosystem services;…release in the atmosphere of large quantities of carbon…”. These are just some of the so-called externalities excluded from the balance sheet of most corporations producing Palm Oil, says Pavan Sukhdev. Continue reading

Princess of Wales Conservatory, Kew Gardens Slow gardening and a good book

I thought I was ahead of the pack a few years ago when I came up with the brilliant new idea of Slow Gardening. I was on my way to a Slow Food event and thought this concept transposed simply to gardens. Then, a few months later at a talk by Sydney horticulturist Bernard Chapman I heard that traditional Japanese gardeners would sit at the site for a new garden for maybe six weeks before even starting to think about a design. Continue reading

Barges on the Grand Union Canal Floating menace in Grand Union Canal

No not these! It’s a plant – rare in its natural habitat and a pest everywhere else. Not an unusual scenario in a world where we destroy vast areas of natural habitat at the same time as spreading seed and other bits of plants as widely as we can so they can test out their prowess in a smorgasbord of new and inviting locations. Continue reading