The B. sanguinea is fairly commonly available in western US. The problem is that most die at the hands of their new owners because they treat them like the tropical angel trumpet. They are a highland species and prefer cool weather. The only place that I have seen them in the ground was coastal Northern California. I have been growing them for years in large (30”) containers in the Seattle area. They like our cool summers, and I wheel them into the garage on winter days that go below freezing, and back out as soon as the night temperatures are above 36f. It’s a labor of love, and they are fantastic in bloom. Try one
Your videos are so dangerous to watch. I'm constantly looking up the plants, where I can buy them, not to mention looking at my calendar next year to see when I can visit. Absolutely gorgeous!
Had hoped to get over to visit Tresco in early May while staying in Penzance but the weather turned & the Scillonian stubbornly remained docked. Very disappointed.
Hi Nick, accommodation is indeed the issue. If you would like to volunteer, November-February are the months where accommodation can potentially be provided. Unfortunately, there is next to nothing available outside those months.
What a fabulous array of plants! Thanks for showing them to us.
It’s my pleasure, thank you for taking the time to watch!
Amazingly beautiful gardens, and lots of our plants and trees from New Zealand! So glad I came across this channel! 💖
Thank you, Carol. New Zealand seems to have a fantastic unique array of flora. I hope to someday visit the Islands
This man has my dream job
My Greyia is in flower here in Australia 🇦🇺 right now at the end of September. Colours beautifully in autumn & is loving its position.
Fantastic, such a beautiful flower
❤
May colours are stunning, especially love that Red Angel's Trumpet!!
Lovely to see the red squirrels too. 😁
They certainly were! Thank you for watching 🙏
The B. sanguinea is fairly commonly available in western US. The problem is that most die at the hands of their new owners because they treat them like the tropical angel trumpet. They are a highland species and prefer cool weather. The only place that I have seen them in the ground was coastal Northern California. I have been growing them for years in large (30”) containers in the Seattle area. They like our cool summers, and I wheel them into the garage on winter days that go below freezing, and back out as soon as the night temperatures are above 36f. It’s a labor of love, and they are fantastic in bloom. Try one
Красота, впечатления супер.❤ Спасибо большое за информацию.
Thank you ☺
Spectacular and inspiring
Thank you, Kevin!
Excellent photography, rare and unusual plants and great plant information. Happy to subscribe.
Thank you for your kind words. Glad you enjoyed it
Another beautiful video! So many lovely shots and interesting facts -- bees cant get enough of it either
Thank you ❤️
Simply amazing !
🙏thank you for watching
So beautiful 🌹🌹🥃👊
Thank you, Chanda 🙏
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Your videos are so dangerous to watch. I'm constantly looking up the plants, where I can buy them, not to mention looking at my calendar next year to see when I can visit. Absolutely gorgeous!
Thank you, Angie. Hope I'm not costing you too much 😆
Had hoped to get over to visit Tresco in early May while staying in Penzance but the weather turned & the Scillonian stubbornly remained docked. Very disappointed.
That is a shame. Travel to and from the islands is notoriously unpredictable
💝💝💝💝🥰🥰🥰🙏
Какое интересное видео - ни одного знакомого растения😁😁😁
I’m glad I could bring a few new plants to you. Thanks for watching
What happened to June?
Apologies for the delay but other projects needed attention. It’s available now 🌱
Find me a place to stay and I will come work in your garden
Hi Nick, accommodation is indeed the issue. If you would like to volunteer, November-February are the months where accommodation can potentially be provided. Unfortunately, there is next to nothing available outside those months.