grundyscribbling: an old fashioned camera (camera)
grundyscribbling ([personal profile] grundyscribbling) wrote2019-08-19 07:50 pm

P365, Day 61 - Plant I Don't Know The Name Of



Posting a day late because things did not upload in timely fashion.

P365 masterpost
heartofoshun: (barcelona)

[personal profile] heartofoshun 2019-08-20 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Is that two plants or one? I recognize those leaves (although I do not know their name), but not the blossoms.
ysilme: A bunch of Swedish summer flowers. (Swedish Summer Flowers)

[personal profile] ysilme 2019-08-21 06:30 am (UTC)(link)
That's an originally south-asian variety of nettle in bloom, coleus/painted nettle; if you look close, the familiarity to other nettle variations is easy to spot, but also easy to miss because the colourful leaves are rather distractding. In Germany it's mostly only an indoor plant as it's very frost-sensitive, or used in seasonal decorative outdoor plantings only. The English Wiki says it's an evergreen perennial, so clearly in other climates. *g*
In German it's called "Buntnessel", Plectranthus scutellarioides, and used to be a very common indoor plant, as it was really hard to kill, very easy to grow, and very beautiful with all kinds of variations of the leaves. I've wanted a pretty one for years, but didn't found one with the kind of leaf colour I like yet - much like the one you have there! :o)
oloriel: photo of a bee hanging from an aquilegia flower, harvesting nectar. (gardening)

[personal profile] oloriel 2019-08-21 08:26 am (UTC)(link)
When I finished 4th grade, our teacher gave all of us a cutting of the Buntnessel plant that was in our classroom. I no longer have the plant that grew from the original cutting but I still have a plant that grew from a cutting from a cutting of the original cutting. So yep, they're definitely easy to grow (and propagate)!
ysilme: Wordle with writing terms "ranting denial typing pain story decision tea". (Wordle: write every day)

[personal profile] ysilme 2019-08-22 10:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Taking a cutting is doubtlessly a great idea! I remember that they take really easily, and are easy to keep, like Oloriel suggests.
So stining nettles aren't a common weed in your parts of the world? This is one of the things one never thinks about, I suppose, like a kind of weed you take for totally granted everywhere remotely in your climate. *g*