I have first seen Berkheya purpurea flowering in a botanical garden in Germany. I really
liked the thistle-like leaves and the large pale-pink daisy flowers but it took
many years until I saw it again, growing in the Merton Borders in Oxford
Botanical Gardens. By then I had already acquired my first allotment so could
try growing this fascinating plant myself.
Berkheya is very easy to grow from seed, you just have to sow the seeds in a
good seed compost, keep them warm and moist and in good light. After about 2
weeks the first seedlings appear. They grow quickly and can soon be pricked out
into individual plugs and later into 9 cm pots. I plant them out on the
allotment when the roots start to grow through the bottom holes.
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Berkheya purpurea flowering in the Merton Borders in Oxford Botanical Gardens |
The plants like to grow in well-drained
soil (especially important in winter) which does not dry out too much in
summer. Sunshine is essential and they don`t like to be crowded by other
plants, a place among other low-growing perennials or at the front of a border
would be ideal.
Berkheya
purpurea has large prickly leaves which form a
low-growing rosette which stays green in a mild winter. Don`t be alarmed when
the leaves turn brown in a hard winter, the plant will grow back from its base
in spring. The first flowers appear in June and carry on until autumn, this
year I had the last flowers in October. The daisy flowers are very large, up to
10 cm in diameter and pale-pink in colour. They attract a lot of pollinators
such as bumblebees, solitary bees and hoverflies.
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Tree bumblebee, honeybee and solitary bee sharing a flower |
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Another tree bumblebee |
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Common carder bumblebee collecting nectar |
South Africa is the home of Berkheya purpurea, the plants grow
naturally along streams and on steep, grassy mountains slopes 1525 to 3050 m
above sea level, from the mountains in the Eastern Cape to the Drakensberg in
KwaZulu-Natal, Lesotho and the border of the Free State. Snow and frost are
common at a higher altitude and summer can be quite wet. This might be one of
the reasons that Berkheya is quite
happy to grow in the UK.
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Frosted Berkheya leaves, still green in December |
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The seed heads look pretty as well |
There are 75 species in the genus, about 71
species are indigenous to South Africa, and most have thistle-like leaves.
Jelitto Perennial Seed offers a selection of different species
including Berkheya purpurea. I would
also like to try Berkheya cirsiifolia,
which has white flowers, so watch this space if I succeed. A few years ago I
had one plant of Berkheya multijuga
(with yellow flowers) which survived a few years, but unfortunately rotted away in
a wet spring. Berkheya purpurea does
seem to be a lot more forgivable and I have not lost a plant so far.
I hope I could spark your interest in
growing this pretty plant; I would love to hear from you if you decide to give
it a go next year.
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