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| | + | Onosmodium (like Onosma, a European genus of this family). Boraginaceae. False Gromwell. About 10 species of N. American and Mexican branching herbs, mostly or wholly perennial, bristly, 1-4 ft. high, rarely transferred to cult, grounds: Lvs. oblong, sessile, rib-veined: fls. white, greenish or yellowish, in long, erect, leafy, raceme-like clusters; corolla tubular or oblong-funnel-shaped, with throat naked, the lobes erect, acute, the sinuses more or less inflexed; style filiform or capillary, very long; stigma exserted before the corolla opens: nutlets ovoid or globular, bony, smooth and polished, white. Closely related to Lithospermum. None of the species seems now to be in the trade; the names and descriptions may be found in the manuals of native plants. They are of little value horticulturally. |
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| | Lithospermum (Greek, stone seed; the seeds like little stones). Boraginaceae. Cromwell. Puccoon. Low-growing hardy mostly herbaceous perennials of minor importance, some of them attractive as alpines and in rock-gardens. | | Lithospermum (Greek, stone seed; the seeds like little stones). Boraginaceae. Cromwell. Puccoon. Low-growing hardy mostly herbaceous perennials of minor importance, some of them attractive as alpines and in rock-gardens. |
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| | In cultivation, the best known is L. fruticosum, a rock-garden trailer, which bears numerous leafy spikes of blue flowers, each about ½ inch across, from early summer to autumn. L. purpureo-caeruleum is also an old garden plant. The common gromwell, L. officinale, is rarely cultivated as a medicinal herb. Others are procurable from dealers in native plants. Seeds of the gromwell and the western species are procurable, and plants of the other kinds from dealers in rock-garden plants. L. fruticosum is said to be propagated only by cuttings of the previous year's wood; L. multiflorum by cuttings of young shoots. The kinds with red roots yield a dye. L. arvense is an annual or biennial introduced weed; but most of the species (and those cultivated) are perennial. The best known garden kinds are European, but the American species are deserving of greater attention. | | In cultivation, the best known is L. fruticosum, a rock-garden trailer, which bears numerous leafy spikes of blue flowers, each about ½ inch across, from early summer to autumn. L. purpureo-caeruleum is also an old garden plant. The common gromwell, L. officinale, is rarely cultivated as a medicinal herb. Others are procurable from dealers in native plants. Seeds of the gromwell and the western species are procurable, and plants of the other kinds from dealers in rock-garden plants. L. fruticosum is said to be propagated only by cuttings of the previous year's wood; L. multiflorum by cuttings of young shoots. The kinds with red roots yield a dye. L. arvense is an annual or biennial introduced weed; but most of the species (and those cultivated) are perennial. The best known garden kinds are European, but the American species are deserving of greater attention. |
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| | + | The garden names of Lithospermum are confused and need to be re-studied. L. coelestinum, Hort., is described as "a most desirable low-growing plant for the rockery," with pretty blue fls. in June. Probably Moltkia caerulea.—L. froebellii, Hort., is said to be "a dwarf compact plant with rosemary-like lvs. and deep blue fls. on erect sts. about 9 in. high."—L. graminfolium Viv.-Moltkia graminifolia.—L. intermedifolium, Hort., is "a pretty dwarf shrubby plant with pale blue fls."—L. intermedium, Hort., perhaps the same as the last, is "a pretty dwarf shrubby species, with fls. a lovely shade of blue." Somewhat shrubby, 8-10 in. high: lvs. narrow and slightly hoary: fls. tubular, drooping. G. 34:857. Probably these are Moltkias.—L. petraeum, A. DC.—Moltkia.—L. rosmarinifolium, Tenore. Evergreen, from Italy and Greece, 1-2 ft.: lvs. narrow, 1 in. or more long: fls. bright blue, striped white about ¼in. diam. Gn.W. 22:139. |
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