The English Garden

Coming up Roses

Take an apple with its stem pointing up and cut it in half along its ‘equator’. You will expose the seeds enclosed in five chambers of the ovary arranged like an asterisk. This pentagonal symmetry abounds in the rose family. Take other orchard fruit – pears, plums, cherries, apricots and almonds. All of these are rosaceous plants with flowers that are fragile five-petalled beauties for a few fleeting weeks in spring. A shiny fat rose hip is crowned with five pointy sepals. In France the fruit of the medlar has coined the common name based on its resemblance to a dog’s nether end. If you prefer not to see that then look for the pentagon!

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The English Garden

The English Garden4 min read
Picture PERFECT
Often described as being at ‘the edge of the world’, East Prawle is a small coastal village in south Devon with a scattering of houses and farms, a duck pond and a village green. There is also a well-known pub, The Pigs Nose Inn, that is the heart of
The English Garden3 min read
Acid Drops
Used as an eye-catching centrepiece, a subtle link between two shades in a herbaceous border or a critical element in a cut-flower arrangement, acid-green plants are invaluable. Claire Greenslade, head gardener at Hestercombe Gardens in Somerset, rev
The English Garden3 min read
Things to Do
Can I make a plea that if you are laying gravel, you ensure perennial weeds such as brambles and bindweed are completely removed beforehand? I’ve had clients place too much faith in a permeable membrane. Residual pieces of weed have an uncanny knack

Related Books & Audiobooks