September Darling Wildflower show, Great Southern Bioblitz, back to our False Bay garden
by Diana Studer
- gardening for biodiversity
in Cape Town, South Africa
We last went to Darling in 2018.
Swartland Granite Renosterveld - renoster means rhino and they had fun with a metal rhino and his lady covered in renosterbos (another Daisy).
Rhinos for Renosterveld |
A day trip for Darling Wildflower Show. Prickles on Heterorhachis aculeata (endemic and Vulnerable). Nemesia strumosa (endemic) is HUGE compared to our local species. Common name Groen goggas ( = green bugs) is an orchid.
Darling Wildflower Show 2024 |
On to the wild flowers we came for at Tienie Versfeld Nature Reserve - named for Marthinus “Oom Tienie” Versfeld who donated the land. Wind turbines - I had to hold the flowers still. Moraea tripetala in sky blue. Heliophila africana.
Blue flowers and wind turbines |
Renosterveld is famous for bulbs, both variety and quantity for a thriving porcupine population. Blue sequins Geissorhiza aspera. Lachenalia. Wachendorfia multiflora, the pink not yellow species. Halo winecup Geissorhiza radians (Endangered). Chink - my mother used to send these tight buds to Granma in London. White Sparaxis bulbifera.
Bulbs from Darling |
Also famous for rocking the daisies. Marsh buttons Cotula coronopifolia near the dam. Orange Arctotis acaulis. Gazania the ultimate orange daisy.
Daisies from Darling |
Pauridia canaliculata with a brown eye (endemic and Endangered), and little person SWIMming in pollen. Gaudy grasshopper not waiting for a photo! Yellow pea waiting to be named on iNaturalist. Bulbinella. Hermannia pinnata yellow twirly bells.
Yellow flowers swimming in pollen |
Orchid Pterygodium orobanchioides - we brought one from our Porterville garden.
Hebenstretia has an orange eye, with the dam behind. Pelargonium triste. Lobostemon.
Darling flowers in soft colours |
Romulea tabularis is named for Table Mountain. Best seen as a 'floating island' (the Peninsula) from across the bay. Here with lenticular cloud as we drove home - not quite enough in the battery, so we stopped for a quick top up at Century City.
Romulea tabularis with That Table |
8 C this October morning with snow on Jonkershoek mountains near Stellenbosch yesterday! Fragrances from funky to delicious in our garden. Blue Coleus neochilus. Long legs is a 'cosmopolitan cellar spider' travelling the world. Agathosma collina. Arum lily is simple self-striped perfection. Coleonema album. Freesia leichtlinii.
White garden flowers in September |
Yellow Clivia has one flower this year. Gladiolus tristis prefers marshy. Albuca taking over this bed. Knowltonia vesicatoria, toothed trifoliate leaves, 'anemone' flowers, then green and black berries - makes for an interesting shady pot. Spanish bluebells two flowers this year, perhaps they need more sun, lots of leaves. Pink pelargoniums in one of 3 patterns.
Yellow garden flowers in September |
Winter warmth in flowers for Through the Garden Gate Down by the Sea in Dorset with Sarah. Flamboyant pink, smouldering salmon and flaming red pelargoniums. Nasturtiums in all the tones from yellow to russet. Dusky pink Veltheimia. Coral begonia.
Winter warmth in September garden flowers |
Garden year month by month here, back to November 2014.
Zoe with her little black African wildcat toes, Thomas with his serious winter boots. As I write the sun is shining and back to 20 C inside.
Zoe and Thomas |
Some flowers are still nameless as iNaturalist is engrossed in the Great Southern Bioblitz. Led by Melbourne, then Pondoland with almost 2 thousand species. We continue to 'name that' till 7 October - 1287 for me so far and that is HOURS a day!!
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It was fun to see the wildflower show - thanks for sharing it! I loved photos of the little cat toes too ;)
ReplyDeleteYour wildflowers are so plentiful and unique. Just lovely. (Zoe and Thomas look comfy and happy. :) Our weather is similar to yours today. We've been 25-30C lately, which is warm for us in September. The next few weeks will be 20-25C. Very comfy. :)
ReplyDeleteImpressive wildflower show! The colours are amazing!
ReplyDeleteLovely to see the cats looking so cosy! Your flower show looks full of exotic blooms compared with English ones! It was good to see all those bulbs growing in their native habitat. As always the flowers in your garden are so colourful. Hope you have a good month and no more distant snow!
ReplyDeleteDiana - first of all, thanks for visiting one of my first posts in the blogosphere! However did you find it?
ReplyDeleteI am glad to get acquainted since we seem to share a love of flowers! Hard to choose a favorite from your post, but I do like Romulea Tabularis. Have a great rest of the week!
From the garden meme to Dorset, then to
Deletehttps://zelenitrenutki.blogspot.com/2024/09/our-garden-in-september-2024.html#comments
What a delightful journey through the Darling Wildflower Show! Your vivid descriptions of the unique flora and the vibrant atmosphere truly capture the essence of this beautiful event. It’s wonderful to see the connection between biodiversity and gardening, especially in such a stunning setting. Your passion for these endemic species shines through in every detail!
ReplyDeleteI just posted a new post, I invite you to read https://www.melodyjacob.com/2024/10/understanding-and-easing-physical-symptoms-of-anxiety.html
but more interested in your posts about Scotland
DeleteI am always thrilled to pop over and see all the wildflowers blooming around you. It really is like heaven to see these unique fragile flowers. And the beauty of flowers in your garden. Those pelargoniums and nasturtiums are summer flowers here. How different our climates and yet we can have similar flowers. My nasturtiums are still blooming here with our cool fall temps.
ReplyDeleteThose are some beautiful wildflowers. Hard to believe Geissorhiza radians is even real with that combination of colors.
ReplyDeleteI'm back! The name glitch has gone, at least for the moment. Anyway, adore your kitties and their cute paws. Also the Halo Winecup is an amazing and standout flower!
ReplyDelete