Perennial anemone

Anemone or anemone is a perennial plant from the Buttercup family. The genus consists of about 150 species and in natural conditions is widespread throughout the Northern Hemisphere, except for the tropics. Anemones mainly grow in the temperate zone, but some of the most beautiful ones come to us from the Mediterranean. Nine species live in the Arctic Circle, and 50 in the countries of the former Soviet Union.

The name "anemone" is translated from Greek as "daughter of the wind". The flower is revered in many countries; many legends have been built around it. It is believed that it was the anemones that grew in the place of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, right under the cross. Esotericists claim that the anemone symbolizes sadness and the transience of life.

This is a very beautiful flower, and due to the variety of species, it can satisfy any taste. Plants differ greatly in appearance and requirements for growing conditions. Early spring anemones are quite unlike those blooming in autumn.

General description of anemones

Anemones are herbaceous perennials with a fleshy rhizome or tuber. Depending on the species, they can reach a height of 10 to 150 cm. The leaves of anemones are most often finger-dissected or separate. Sometimes peduncles grow from a root rosette, which is absent in some species. The color of the leaves can be green or grayish, in cultivars - silvery.

Flowers of anemones are solitary or collected in groups in loose umbrellas. The color in natural species is often white or pink, blue, blue, rarely red. Varieties and hybrids, especially in crown anemones, amaze with a variety of shades. Symmetrical flowers in natural species are simple, with 5-20 petals. Cultural forms can be double and semi-double.

After flowering, small fruits are formed in the form of nuts, naked or pubescent. They have poor germination. Most often, anemones reproduce vegetatively - by rhizomes, offspring and tubers. Many species require shelter for winter or even digging and storing in cold weather at positive temperatures.

Among the anemone there are shade-loving, shade-tolerant, and preferring bright lighting. Many are used as ornamental plants in landscape design, crown anemone is grown for cut, buttercup and oak wood - for the manufacture of medicines.

Important! Like all members of the family, anemone is poisonous, you cannot eat them.

Classification by type of rhizome and flowering period

Of course, all 150 species will not be listed here. We will divide into groups anemones, most often grown as cultivated plants, or participating in the creation of hybrids. Photos of flowers will complement their brief description.

Early flowering rhizome anemones

Ephemeroid anemones bloom first. They bloom after the snow melts, and when the buds wither, the aboveground part dries out. They have a very short growing season, ephemeroids grow on forest edges and have long, articulated rhizomes. Flowers are usually solitary. These include anemones:

  • Dubravnaya. Height up to 20 cm, flowers are white, rarely greenish, cream, pink, lilac. It is often found in deciduous forests of Russia. There are several garden forms.
  • Buttercup. This anemone grows up to 25 cm. Its flowers really look like a buttercup and have a yellow color. Garden forms can be terry, with purple leaves.
  • Altai. Reaches 15 cm, Flower contains 8-12 whites petals, which on the outside may have a bluish color.
  • Smooth.Quite an ordinary anemone, it stands out with large stamens inside white flowers.
  • Ural. The pink flowers bloom in late spring.
  • Blue. The height of the plant is about 20 cm, the color of the flowers is white or blue.

Tuberous anemone

Tuberous anemones bloom a little later. These are the most beautiful representatives of the genus with a short growing season:

  • Crowned. The most beautiful, capricious and thermophilic of all anemone. Grown for cutting, decorates flower beds. Garden forms can grow up to 45 cm in height. Poppy-looking flowers can be simple or double, of various colors, bright or pastel, even two-colored. This anemone is used as a forcing plant.
  • Tender (Blanda). Cold-resistant anemone. It is light-requiring, drought-resistant, grows up to 15 cm, has many garden forms with different flower colors.
  • Sadovaya. Flowers of this species reach 5 cm in size, bushes - 15-30 cm. Differs in openwork foliage and a variety of colors of cultural forms. Anemone tubers are dug up for the winter.
  • Caucasian. The height of the anemone is 10-20 cm, the flowers are blue. It is a cold-resistant plant that prefers sunny places and moderate watering.
  • Apennine. Anemone about 15 cm high with single blue flowers 3 cm in diameter. Cold-resistant species, wintering in the ground.

 

Comment! Crown anemone and other species that require digging in the fall bloom much later in home gardens than in natural conditions. This is due to the time of their planting in the ground.

Autumn anemone

Anemones, whose flowers bloom in late summer - early autumn, are usually distinguished into a separate group. They are all rhizome, tall, unlike other species. Flowers of autumn anemone are collected in loose racemose inflorescences. It is easy to care for them, the main thing is that the plant survives the transplant. These include anemone:

  • Japanese. The species anemone grows up to 80 cm, the varieties rise by 70-130 cm.The gray-green pinnately dissected leaves may seem rough, but they are softened by simple or semi-double elegant flowers of pastel shades gathered in groups.
  • Hubei. Under natural conditions, it grows up to 1.5 m, garden forms are bred so that the plant does not exceed 1 m. The leaves of the anemone are dark green in color, the flowers are smaller than those of the previous species.
  • Grape-leaved. This anemone is rarely grown as a garden plant, but is more often used to create new hybrids. Its leaves are very large, they can reach 20 cm and have not 3, but 5 lobes.
  • Felt. The most winter hardy of autumn anemone... It grows up to 120 cm and is distinguished by fragrant pink flowers.
  • Hybrid. The most beautiful of the autumn anemones. This species is created artificially from the above anemone. It can have a bright color and large simple or semi-double flowers.

It should be said here that Japanese and Hubei anemones are often considered one species. There is no agreement on this issue even among scientists, as they differ slightly. It is believed that the Hubei anemone came to Japan around the time of the Tang dynasty in China, over the millennium it adapted to local conditions and changed. Probably, narrow specialists are very interested in this, but for us it is enough to know that these anemones look great in the garden and do not require much maintenance.

Anemones forming root suckers

These anemones are the easiest to breed. Their growing season is extended for the entire season, and root suckers are easy to plant, minimally injuring the mother bush. This group includes anemones:

  • Forest. Primrose from 20 to 50 cm high. Large flowers up to 6 cm in diameter are white. Grows well in partial shade. In culture since the XIV century. There are garden forms with double or large flowers up to 8 cm in diameter.
  • Fork. This anemone grows in flooded meadows, can reach 30-80 cm. Its deeply dissected leaves are pubescent below, small white flowers can have a reddish tint on the back of the petal.

Anemones of North America

Anemone, the natural range of which is North America, Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands, is usually distinguished into a separate group. They are rare in our country, although they look very attractive and are distinguished by long flowering. These are anemones:

  • Multiseps (multi-headed). The birthplace of the flower is Alaska. It is rarely found in culture and resembles a tiny lumbago.
  • Multifeed (multi-cut). The anemone is so named because its foliage looks like a lumbago. By the end of spring, pale yellow flowers with a diameter of 1-2 cm with green stamens appear. Absolutely does not tolerate transplants, propagates by seeds. It is widely used in the creation of hybrids.
  • Canadian. This anemone blooms all summer, its leaves are long, white star-shaped flowers rise 60 cm above the surface of the ground.
  • Spherical. Its range stretches from Alaska to California. Anemone grows up to 30 cm, the color of flowers - from salad to purple. It got its name from its round fruit.
  • Drumoda. This anemone grows in the same vast area as the previous species. Its height is 20 cm, white flowers on the lower side are painted in a green or blue tint.
  • Daffodil (bunch). It blooms in summer, reaches a height of 40 cm. It grows well on calcareous soil. The flower of this anemone really looks like a lemon or yellowish-white daffodil. It is widely used in landscape design.
  • Parviflora (small-flowered). Grows from Alaska to Colorado in mountain meadows and slopes. The leaves of this anemone are very beautiful, dark green, shiny. Single cream small flowers.
  • Oregon. In spring, blue flowers appear on a bush about 30 cm high. The anemone differs in that it has a single basal leaf and three on the stem. Garden forms are variably colored, there are dwarf varieties.
  • Richardson. A very beautiful anemone, an inhabitant of the mountainous Alaska. A bright yellow flower on a miniature bush 8-15 cm high is suitable for rocky gardens.

The basics of caring for anemones

What you need to know when caring for an anemone?

  1. All species grow well in partial shade. The exception is tuberous anemones, they need more sun. Early spring epiphytes are shade-loving.
  2. The soil must be water and breathable.
  3. Acidic soils are not suitable for anemone; they need to be deoxidized with ash, lime or dolomite flour.
  4. When planting tuberous anemones, remember that thermophilic species need to be dug out for the winter. Until October, they are stored at a temperature of about 20 degrees, then it is reduced to 5-6.
  5. In the spring, the anemone is watered once a week. In hot, dry summers, you will have to moisten the soil in a flowerbed with crown anemone every day.
  6. It is best to replant the anemone in the spring or after flowering.
  7. The digging of anemones that do not winter in the ground must be completed before their aboveground part disappears.
  8. Stagnation of moisture at the roots is unacceptable.
  9. Crowned anemone needs more feeding than other species.
  10. Anemone blooming in autumn is less capricious than other species.
  11. The anemone has a fragile root. Even easy-to-care plants grow poorly in the first season, but then quickly gain green mass and grow.
  12. You need to rinse the anemones by hand. It is impossible to loosen the soil under them - this way you will damage the fragile root.
  13. It is best to immediately mulch the planting of anemone with dry humus. It will retain moisture, make it difficult for weeds to reach the light and serve as an organic feeding.
  14. It is best to cover even anemones wintering in the ground in autumn with peat, humus or dry leaves. The layer of mulch should be the thicker, the farther north your region is.

Conclusion

Anemones are wonderful flowers. There are unpretentious species that are suitable for a small-care garden, and there are capricious ones, but so beautiful that it is impossible to take your eyes off them. Choose the ones that suit your taste.

Give feedback

Garden

Flowers

Construction