I'm joining blog pal Loree of Danger Garden in posting my favorite plant this week.
If you've been reading my blog since I began, you may remember this saga spanning over twenty years of plant discovery, lust, unrequited love, yearning, and at long last love (thank you Mr. Porter) all about Tropaeolum speciosum, my favorite plant this week and most frustrating plant to grow ever!
Here are some pictures of the long awaited happy blooming wonderful plants blooming their heads off among the golden hops and honeysuckle vines. This was the most vigorous and floriferous year I'd ever had with these puppies that I'd been planting over and over again in as many different areas of my garden as possible.
I was overjoyed that this one seemed to be happy and decided to stay in my garden because people say that once you have it, you have it! Imagine my disappointment this year when this year I didn't see a single leaf of this beauty anywhere! RATS! (You know Tropaeolum tuberosum is much more dependable and comes up every year exactly where I planted it! Why can't you be more like your cousin?)
On Sunday morning, I looked out of the back porch and what did I see in the spot where I planted the first roots of this plant in this garden 16 years ago? You guessed it! Interestingly the color on these seems to be more on the blue side. I don't know if this is one of the Heronswood original roots or one of the subsequent ones sent from Scotland that I planted there. The top images are of plants from Far Reaches Farm. Also the top ones are in full sun while the following are in only part sun. I remember the originals growing, blooming gloriously, setting seed and then very rapidly dying never to return again until now. Is it possible that the tiny vines have been sending out growth each year and gaining strength to bloom again?
Could it be that this is a vine that grew from one of the seeds that fell on the ground and took a long time to germinate? (15 years is a long time!)
If you've been reading my blog since I began, you may remember this saga spanning over twenty years of plant discovery, lust, unrequited love, yearning, and at long last love (thank you Mr. Porter) all about Tropaeolum speciosum, my favorite plant this week and most frustrating plant to grow ever!
Here are some pictures of the long awaited happy blooming wonderful plants blooming their heads off among the golden hops and honeysuckle vines. This was the most vigorous and floriferous year I'd ever had with these puppies that I'd been planting over and over again in as many different areas of my garden as possible.
I was overjoyed that this one seemed to be happy and decided to stay in my garden because people say that once you have it, you have it! Imagine my disappointment this year when this year I didn't see a single leaf of this beauty anywhere! RATS! (You know Tropaeolum tuberosum is much more dependable and comes up every year exactly where I planted it! Why can't you be more like your cousin?)
On Sunday morning, I looked out of the back porch and what did I see in the spot where I planted the first roots of this plant in this garden 16 years ago? You guessed it! Interestingly the color on these seems to be more on the blue side. I don't know if this is one of the Heronswood original roots or one of the subsequent ones sent from Scotland that I planted there. The top images are of plants from Far Reaches Farm. Also the top ones are in full sun while the following are in only part sun. I remember the originals growing, blooming gloriously, setting seed and then very rapidly dying never to return again until now. Is it possible that the tiny vines have been sending out growth each year and gaining strength to bloom again?
Could it be that this is a vine that grew from one of the seeds that fell on the ground and took a long time to germinate? (15 years is a long time!)
Just like in the song "Scarlett Ribbons" sung by Doris Day, Harry Belafonte, Jim Reeves, The Browns, The Brothers Four, Joan Baez, Sinead O'Conner,and just about everyone else
"If I live to be a hundred
I will never know from where
Came those lovely scarlet ribbons
Scarlet ribbons for her hair..."
I will never know from where
Came those lovely scarlet ribbons
Scarlet ribbons for her hair..."
(vermillion ribbons doesn't fit quite so well and isn't as schmaltzy)
Here for your listening pleasure are the lovely Lennon Sisters. Wunnerful, wunnerful. (If you're too young to get the reference, bless your heart and please remember to come visit me at the home in a few years!)
Anyway, I'll keep watching all of the spots where this plant has appeared over the years. Let's hope that the sightings are more frequent that those of the Flying Dutchman!
Loree always puts lots of great information about her favorites in her posts. I'm too lazy for that but here's what Fine Gardening has to say about this plant:
Botanical Name:Tropaeolum speciosumtroe-pay-OH-lum spee-see-OH-sum
Common Name: Flame nasturtium, Scottish flame flowerGenus:Tropaeolum

This tender perennial climber has edible, hand-shaped leaves and crimson red flowers in summer and fall which are uniquely textured. Their softly squared petals are held apart from each other at the flower's mouth and the rear tapers to long spurs. The blooms yield blue fruits. Flame nasturtium climbs up to 10 feet.Noteworthy characteristics: These tender perennials are native to Central and South America. Some species are bushy or trailing; they are suitable for garden edges, herb gardens, covering banks, hanging baskets, and other containers.Care: Grow in moist, well-drained soil in full sun to partial shade. T. speciosum prefers a cool, shady root run.Propagation: Sow fresh seed in pots in a cold frame.Problems: Caterpillars, flea beetles, black aphids, slugs, whiteflies, viruses.
Height | 6 ft. to 10 ft. |
Spread | 6 ft. to 10 ft. |
Growth Habit | Clumps |
Growth Pace | Fast Grower |
Light | Full Sun to Part Shade |
Moisture | Medium Moisture |
Maintenance | Low |
Characteristics | Attracts Butterflies; Attracts Hummingbirds; Fragrant Flowers; Self Seeds; Showy Flowers; Showy Foliage; Showy Fruit; Showy Seed Heads |
Bloom Time | Fall; Summer |
Flower Color | Red Flower |
Uses | Beds and Borders, Container, Ground Covers, Cut Flower, Indoor Plant, Naturalizing, Screening, Specimen Plant/ Focal Point, Suitable as Annual, Trellis |
Style | Herb Garden, Cottage Garden |
Seasonal Interest | Summer Interest, Fall Interest |
Type | Perennials (Zone 7 - 10) |