I got these in a wildflower seed packet. They're one of the few species that come up again year after year. The orange colour is intens...Read Moree and beautiful, the flowers smell good and flowering lasts for several months.
Last year the location became very shady, but the wallflowers still kept growing and blooming. I collected some seeds and sowed them in a few other locations. This resulted in many new plants. They even grew in clay soil which is often dry.
"Delightful plant with glowing orange-colored flowers forming a showy cl...Read Moreuster. They are very fragrant. Hillsides and sandy wastes in California."
And from Hortus Third, revised by staff of the L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Cornell U:
The origin of the Siberian wallflower is, in fact, "from western and central North America. [It is also called 'Western Prairie Rocket' as it does shoot up to 3']."
If you are gardening in the cottage garden style, where all times of year are celebrated by some aspect of seasonal planting, there is a small grouping unique to late winter that would provide flowers and fragrance during warm spells. The woody component of this association would contribute to the garden's effect of receding into a "woods" along its outer boundaries (however miniature). In other seasons, other flowers would come into their own in the foreground.
Stephen Lacy, in his book, The Startling Jungle, suggests combining "...orange wallflowers, plum-coloured Euphorbia amygdaloides 'Purpurea' and lime-green polyanthus. Wallflowers should be sown in May, transplanted in June and transferred to their flowering positions in September." I think these hot colors could set off the pale, waxy, fragrant flowers of Chimonanthus praecox behind them as the background woody plant (prune right after flowering to keep within boundaries).
The foregoing is fine for zone 6 (-10*F), but this Englishman's idea can be translated for harsher, colder gardens in the North American midwest, which is where this Prairie Rocket (aka Siberian Wallflower) came from. Hardy to zone 4a (-30*F), the dwarf red-leaved barberry (Berberis thunbergii var. atropurpurea 'Crimson Pygmy') could be substituted for the Euphorbia, which would also contribute the attractive black tones in a red-purple to the foreground of the rangier orange selection of this wallflower and be cute with the polyanthus hugging the ground in front. Hamamelis mollis (Chinese Witch Hazel), hardy to zone 5a (-20*F) could substitute for the Chimonanthus.
There are endless combinations of plants that can fill the roles of woody background, attractive leaves lower down in the foreground, something coming up between those two and something else that looks like a bunny just hopped in for shelter - like the polyanthus. But mainly, I just wanted to show how a much loved North American native wildflower that might be a little too rangy or uncouth on its own in a garden setting can bring the wilderness to more pampered buddies.
I think it might be worthwhile to try germinating seed of this plant by wintersowing. Visit the Wintersowing Forum on DG) as an alternative mode of propagation.
I got these in a wildflower seed packet. They're one of the few species that come up again year after year. The orange colour is intens...Read More
from The Fragrant Path by Louise Beebe Wilder:
"Delightful plant with glowing orange-colored flowers forming a showy cl...Read More
An evergreen biennial or short lived perennial from North America.
Has greyish to mid green, lance like leaves. Bears 4 pe...Read More