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Old January 29th 08, 08:50 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Graham Easterling[_2_] Graham Easterling[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2007
Posts: 1,810
Default Cornwall in mid winter

On 29 Jan, 19:58, "Alan Gardiner" wrote:
"MCC" wrote in message

...





On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 00:58:11 -0800 (PST), Graham Easterling wrote:


On 29 Jan, 02:57, "Eric Ingham" wrote:
wrote in message


...


It's a lovely website run by Charles Winpenny. I'm a regular.


Jack


Me too! His knowledge of the flora and fauna make it very special.


Eric


He's just updated it, click on recent photos 'Newquay' to see the ones
I was refering to. Amazingly there is a hottentot fig in flower in the
latest batch of photos. It is a meditteranean climate (from S African)
plant, which normally flowers in Summer, not January.


Graham
Penzance


The National Trust doesn't like Hottentot Figs growing on their land
because they have been destroying every plant they see growing on Trust
property on the Lizard.
Vandals!
--
MCC


There is an Independent newspaper article athttp://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/invasive-species-bann...
which discusses Hottentot fig and other alien invaders.

It seems that it will be illegal, if the schedule is accepted, to plant
Hottentot fig even if it is growing outside your door. It clearly is causing
competition problems in some places with native plant species. For example
in Jersey it is smothering native heather and gorse and the same is true in
Bournemouth where it is being removed from the cliffs to protect indigenous
plants.

Alan
St Albans- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Blimey, it sounds like the hottentot fig is up there with scattered
showers. Will there be anything left that isn't banned? If this
attitude continues where does it leave Tresco Abbey gardens which has
smothered 30% of Tresco with alien plants? (including the hottentot
fig)

As Nick said, it grows mainly on very steep unstable south facing
cliffs, where virtually nothing else can survive, looks nice, & binds
the cliff together. Heather tends to grow more on the flatter cliff
tops the hottentot doesn't like. In fact it's very selective. It won't
grow in my garden in Penzance, yet is quite happy clinging to the
sheer wall at the garden of my cottage, where I planted it. See
www.easterling.freeserve.co.uk/ where it is in the picture just left
of the mesembrianthemum , which likes a very similar habitat.

Graham
Penzance