Makes me feel ill just thinking about it. Empathy coming his way. No motorcycling for a while then!
Flowers are the wrong type for Honesty. That has ones with four petals in a cross shape. This looks more like a member of the mint family, say...
The leaves you can see in the picture are 'greyish'. Those of sedum acre and its different forms are green with occasionally white markings....
By the looks of the leaves I would say it was Sedum spathulifolium possibly Cape Blanca, but there are others like it, differning only in the...
Top one is a Campanula rather than a Gentian. The second one looks rather like a Sedge rather than a grass. Are the leaves three cornered?
Sorry, but I think that is Sisyrinchium striatum. Quite pretty, but can be a bit of a seed weed if happy.
Certain it is not a Sedum. There are none that I know of which have spotted leaves like this, except when they are ill! Otherwise cannot help, sorry.
Still looking. Wonder if it is one of the American, Stewartia?
Could well be E. Emerald and Gold, but there are lots of different (slightly) E.fortunei forms.
The last one is also a Sedum, probably one sold as S. rupestre Angelina. As a member of the Sedum society I ought to be able to put a name to the...
Eucryphia is in the rose family,so you would expect the flowers to look like roses. But, I stand by my id. 'cos we would love to have one, but...
Eucryphia springs to mind, but which one?
Not sure either, but what a wonderful example of how to ask for identification, with flower, leaf, and scale.
That is the one. Aronia, probably melanocarpa. Though it could be x prunifolia. I knew that I should know it. We use the berries to make...
[img] The flower. It is about 1cm (half inch) across [img] The leaf. It is about 5 cms (2 inches) long and 1cm at the widest. Whole shrub...
Not subulata, the leaves on the second picture are too big for either subulata or douglasii. I would go for divaricata as suggested or possibly P....
It could be Crinum x powelli alba
From the foliage I can tell you it is a form of P. lactiflora, the herbaceous peony rather than P. suffruticosa, the tree peony.
Cardamine pratensis (Lady's Smock). Quite rare these days too.
I bet in a couple of days it has a tiny white flower on it. It looks remarkably like the weed I get in a lot of outside seed pots. Having a senior...
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