A couple of weeks ago I spent a few days in London. One of the highlights was a visit to the Chelsea Physic Garden.
I spent a very peaceful five hours wandering among the beds and borders enjoying this lovely calm place, right in the centre of London.
The garden has a long history, it was originally used by apothecaries for growing the herbs and medicinal plants they used. Now it is a research and educational garden which is also open to the public (but not on Saturdays or Mondays).
You wont be surprised that my main interest was the dye plant section of the 'Useful Plants' garden, but really every corner of the garden was interesting.
| a less welcome visitor |
| Puya chilensis - about 2.5m tall |
The garden has a long history, it was originally used by apothecaries for growing the herbs and medicinal plants they used. Now it is a research and educational garden which is also open to the public (but not on Saturdays or Mondays).
| the dye garden |
You wont be surprised that my main interest was the dye plant section of the 'Useful Plants' garden, but really every corner of the garden was interesting.
| Genista tinctoria - dyers' broom or dyers' greenweed |
| Reseda luteola - weld |
| Rubia tinctoria - madder |
| Asperula tinctoria - dyers' woodruff |
| Galium odoratum |
| Baptisia australis - false indigo |
| Rhus typhina - sumac |
Chelsea Physic Garden
Reviewed by Unknown
on
July 09, 2015
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