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Gardening 101: Yellow Wax-Bells
Yellow Wax-Bells: Kirengeshoma palmata
After the September Equinox, plants that are waxing rather than waning are especially appealing. Part of the Hydrangeaceae family, kirengeshoma resembles hydrangea in its growth habit (at 3 to 4 feet, it is as wide as it is tall) and its striking foliage.
Kirengoshoma palmata, with leaves that are as interesting as the flowers.
At the end of the growing season, lemon yellow kirengeshoma keeps its cool, away from the riot of pinks and oranges.
Kirengeshoma’s petals are diffidently whorled, the opposite to spring’s reflexing flowers.
Palmate leaves combine with jagged green sepals and dark red stems to provide an impressive backdrop to the flowers themselves, which hang like bells up and down the plant, spilling onto a path.
The Kirengeshoma palmata shown here grows at the Oxford Botanic Garden, and it has been imaginatively partnered with an unusual rose, labeled Rosa x chinensis ‘Yellow Mutabilis’.
Mingling with the fresh growth of Rosa x chinensis ‘Yellow Mutabilis’.