Welcome to the Gardeners Club

Have you ever stumbled across something in your garden that has taken you by surprise? Well, as long as that surprise is a plant you can't recognise and not a present from Spot the dog, this section is for you. This area of the site allows you to submit photos of the strange, curious and unknown plant varieties that have come to call your garden home. Details of how you can submit your own pictures can be found at the bottom of this page.

HELP OUT YOUR FELLOW MEMBERS AND TRY TO IDENTIFY THESE PLANTS

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Plant 84 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Gardeners Club Member - UK


Please help find a name for this obnoxious plant. It's fuzzy, stinky, invasive,and rather ugly. This plant moves by an underground root which sends up stems with small white bell shaped flowers that have 5 short petals from the bell's ridge. The flower stem is curved downward. Leaves are heart shaped and new stems arise from the leaf joints. Thought it might be solanum or capsicum still guessing.

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Plant 83a, b, c Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Phillip, USA


I am so glad I found your web site. I joined right away. What a wonderful resource. So far I haven't been able to find something like this in the U.S.!

I have several plants in my backyard in Oregon, Wisconsin (U.S.). I wonder if anyone knows what they are.
Thank You for any help I may be able to get.

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Plant 82 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Penny - UK


A friend has recently taken over a country pub in Wiltshire, in the yard were three plants in pots, just the leaves, late in the summer they all threw up flower spikes, the more sheltered of the three grew two, the flowers have a slight waxy feel to them.
Please can you tell me what they are, will the fact that they have flowered mean that they will die (as some plants do), if not - what is the best care for them. So far they are only watered and have been given a top dressing of one of the John Innes Compounds.
If they should have any special care for the winter we would appreciate knowing as soon as possible.
Thank you in anticipation.


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Plant 81 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Mark - UK


This was a bush in a planting within a business park - used to separate car park sections. Could it be some form of Weigela?

 

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Plant 80 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Keith - UK


Can you please identify this plant which has flowered profusely for over three months despite my total ineptitude in the garden.

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Plant 79 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Sam - UK


I recently moved into a new house that has this plant growing in the garden.It is currently 5ft high. My mum thinks its Japanese knotweed. I don't think it has flowered at all over the summer. Please, somebody tell me it isn't Japanese Knotweed. Thank you for any suggestions.

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Plant 78 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

John - UK


This plant/tree is growing out of my Dicksonai tree fern that did not overwinter. Some of the leaves are very small and some are long and larger, some of each on some branches as shown. It grows to 8 feet tall so far. Could it be of New Zealand origin?

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Plant 77 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Jean - UK

Physocarpus Opulifolius

Hello - please can you give me the details of this plant - I bought it in Wales last year, made sure it had a label on it, but when I got home, the writing is in 4 different languages, none of them English.

I have the plant in a large tub at the moment, but not sure where it should be planted in garden, also how big it will get eventually.

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Plant 76 Submitted by:

Any Suggestions?

Ruth - UK


I would be grateful if someone could identify this plant for me please. It flowers July to September and loses all foliage over winter. Thanks Ruth

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To submit your own photo's for identification send any digital photo's to namethatplant@gardenersclub.co.uk or send standard photo entries to:

The Gardeners Club
Castle House
89 High Street
Berkhamsted
Hertfordshire
HP4 2DF

Once your pictures have been submitted the Gardeners Club technical team will then get them online for your fellow gardeners to identify - keep checking back to see if anyone has been able to help.

     
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