

From the Station Road gate, many indicators of how long I’ve been away. Tall stems of Verbena bonariensis bounce gawkily in the breeze in a gaudy mix of colour, clumps of sedum whose flowerheads have faded to an elderly pink amongst vivid yellows and crimsons, and the strikingly blue-purple hoods of Aconitum carmichaelii var arendsii, a cultivar of the Chinese wolfbane. Prompted by the Garden’s notes, I investigate the dark veins on the hoods and the ‘pompom of black anthered stamens’ within, careful not to touch: in common with all monkshoods, all parts of this plant are highly toxic.



