Bleeding Heart
Bleeding Heart! What an odd name for a plant. Why is it named so?
I wondered when I first saw this plant as a child as to how
can such lovely flowers be given such a depressing name. Then I was told that
it was due to the shape of the flowers that they were given this name. Well, at
that time, however hard I tried, I could not imagine its flower to look like a
bleeding heart. I didn’t even know how a human heart looked like, most probably
to which it was being compared. Do they look like their name now? I don’t think
so. But whatever they may look like, the thing that I knew was how wonderful
would it be to have it growing in our house. At an age when the only flowers I
knew of were Roses and Marigolds, something with a peculiar name like Bleeding
Heart caught my attention and got etched in my memory.
Botanical name : Clerodendrum thomsoniae
Family : Verbenaceae
A perennial, medium sized vine and a native of West Africa, it is grown as an ornamental owing to its eye catching inflorescence. Though it is a liana (woody climber) but it can be pruned to form a shrub.
Family : Verbenaceae
A perennial, medium sized vine and a native of West Africa, it is grown as an ornamental owing to its eye catching inflorescence. Though it is a liana (woody climber) but it can be pruned to form a shrub.
Leaves are
dark green and ovate in shape. Inflorescence is a terminal cyme. Flowers have
an off-white calyx that look like tiny balloons initially. Corolla is crimson
coloured and emerges out from the centre of calyx. At first it looks like a
little pink bud hidden safely inside the calyx, but its colour deepens as it
grows longer and emerges out from its shelter. Stamens (five in number) and style are much
longer than the corolla. The corolla is short lived and dries up soon but the
calyx remains on the plant for a long time.
It blooms throughout summers. In winters however it will shed leaves
leaving the stems bare. The exposed stems look rather dry and one doubts
whether there will be any fresh growth again but they look dry only from the
outside. Inside they are green and fresh and will give out new leaves in spring
or early summer.
Firecracker plant
The day I saw Bleeding Heart, I saw another plant for the
first time and found it quite strange, actually strangely beautiful. It looked
like a small, messy shrub with needle like leaves (which reminded me of Pine
tree but they were actually stems) bearing bell shaped flowers. The whole plant with slender branches and
little hanging flowers looked very delicate. But no one knew its name. Many years later it occurred to me that I
should look for these two plants in a nursery. Getting Bleeding Heart was easy
as I knew its name but how could I get this one? I neither knew its name nor
could I describe it properly. The second
time I saw it, several years later, growing in a pot in the balcony of a
house. I guess it’s not a popular
ornamental plant here. But it was a lucky day. As I was looking for flowering
annuals in a nursery I saw 8-10 of these plants placed at one end of the
nursery some distance away, half hidden by taller plants surrounding it. I
immediately recognized it and ran straight towards them and said,“I want this.
What’s its name?"
Botanical name : Russelia equisetiformis
Family : Plantaginaceae
The Firecracker or Coral plant when in bloom gives out long sprays of red tubular flowers at the
ends of cascading branches that look like firecrackers, hence the name Firecracker plant. It starts blooming in spring. Maximum flowering takes place
in summers. Thereafter, with the coming of rains, it slows down a little.
The stems are slender, angled with ridges and about 4-5 feet
long. They grow straight at first and then cascade down thus making the plant a
weeping shrub. Leaves are dark green, tiny, oval in shape and present in very
few numbers. Flowers are small, red in colour, tubular and bi-lipped. And yes, Sunbirds
love visiting them to feed on their nectar reserves.
Firecracker plant has a messy growing habit. But this is
where its beauty lies. It can be grown in a pot or hanging basket but should be
placed in an open space.