Posted by oaks on March 9, 2008, 7:39 am
Hi thanks for your help so far.
This next one should be quite easy for you. I don't think it is native
and you
probably grow these in your gardens.
There are several of these shrubs, well spaced but quite close to a row
of
houses, whose gardens back onto the wood.
Can anyone tell me what it is?
http://tinyurl.com/24gcqr
best regards
Colin
--
oaks
Posted by Sacha on March 9, 2008, 11:45 am
On 9/3/08 11:39, in article oaks.249ac36@gardenbanter.co.uk, "oaks"
>
> Hi thanks for your help so far.
>
> This next one should be quite easy for you. I don't think it is native
> and you probably grow these in your gardens.
>
> There are several of these shrubs, well spaced but quite close to a row
> of houses, whose gardens back onto the wood.
>
> Can anyone tell me what it is?
>
> http://tinyurl.com/24gcqr
>
> best regards
> Colin
>
>
Looks like Ribes sanguineum - aka flowering currant, though it's not a
fruit! It seems to vary quite a bit in colour in the wild and is originally
a native of USA.
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
Posted by robert on March 9, 2008, 6:54 pm
>On 9/3/08 11:39, in article oaks.249ac36@gardenbanter.co.uk, "oaks"
>>
>> Hi thanks for your help so far.
>>
>> This next one should be quite easy for you. I don't think it is native
>> and you probably grow these in your gardens.
>>
>> There are several of these shrubs, well spaced but quite close to a row
>> of houses, whose gardens back onto the wood.
>>
>> Can anyone tell me what it is?
>>
>> http://tinyurl.com/24gcqr
>>
>> best regards
>> Colin
>>
>>
>Looks like Ribes sanguineum - aka flowering currant, though it's not a
>fruit! It seems to vary quite a bit in colour in the wild and is originally
>a native of USA.
It is a flowering currant, we have one growing on the roadside outside
our entrance. They do produce berries but I have never been tempted to
try one.
--
Robert
Posted by Sacha on March 10, 2008, 2:49 am
On 9/3/08 22:54, in article 83YyIKBWqG1HFwqO@rbel1.plus.com, "robert"
>> On 9/3/08 11:39, in article oaks.249ac36@gardenbanter.co.uk, "oaks"
>>
>>>
>>> Hi thanks for your help so far.
>>>
>>> This next one should be quite easy for you. I don't think it is native
>>> and you probably grow these in your gardens.
>>>
>>> There are several of these shrubs, well spaced but quite close to a row
>>> of houses, whose gardens back onto the wood.
>>>
>>> Can anyone tell me what it is?
>>>
>>> http://tinyurl.com/24gcqr
>>>
>>> best regards
>>> Colin
>>>
>>>
>> Looks like Ribes sanguineum - aka flowering currant, though it's not a
>> fruit! It seems to vary quite a bit in colour in the wild and is originally
>> a native of USA.
>>
> It is a flowering currant, we have one growing on the roadside outside
> our entrance. They do produce berries but I have never been tempted to
> try one.
I've no idea if they're edible but what I meant - and didn't make clear at
all - is that they're not currant bushes such as black currant, red currant
etc. They're grown as ornamentals.
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
> Hi thanks for your help so far.
>
> This next one should be quite easy for you. I don't think it is native
> and you probably grow these in your gardens.
>
> There are several of these shrubs, well spaced but quite close to a row
> of houses, whose gardens back onto the wood.
>
> Can anyone tell me what it is?
>
> http://tinyurl.com/24gcqr
>
> best regards
> Colin
>
>