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Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog

The wonder of plants and fungi.

Jeremy Bartlett's Let It Grow Blog
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"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us." - Iris Murdoch

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Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 24 January, 2022 by Jeremy Bartlett25 May, 2024
Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima

Seeds of Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima. December 2021.

Flowers are a bit scarce at the moment, though seasonal favourites Snowdrops and Winter Aconites are beginning to make an appearance and Winter Heliotrope has been wowing us with its scent for the past month.

Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima, is a perennial plant with evergreen foliage. It flowers in late spring and summer (peaking in June and July, though I have seen it flowering in mid May in a sheltered spot on the Isle of Wight). Its flowers are subtly pretty (see the Wildflower Finder website) and attractive to bees but it is the brightly coloured seeds that are the highlight. These last throughout the winter and can be seen at the moment, providing a welcome splash of colour (bright orange or scarlet).

Iris foetidissima is a native of Great Britain, where it is found in hedge banks and in woods, as well as on sheltered scrubby sea-cliffs, with a preference for calcareous soils. It is considered to be an alien in Ireland. Further afield it is native to mainland France, Italy, Portugal and Spain, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, the Azores, Balearic islands, Corsica, Sardinia and Sicily. It has been introduced to California, the Canary Islands, Madeira, New Zealand (North Island), Switzerland, Tasmania, Turkey, the former Yugoslavia and possibly Belgium (note 1). The plant can spread vegetatively and by seed. In Britain it is a frequent a garden escape.

There is a lot of Stinking Iris in woodland sloping steeply down to the River Waveney, near Bungay, and this is where I took the photograph above.

Stinking Iris is highly tolerant of drought and shade and will grow beneath trees and even in the darkest dingiest corners. This makes it a good garden plant for difficult places and The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) have given it an Award of Garden Merit (AGM). Alys Fowler suggests it for “jollying up the base of a leylandii hedge that you can’t get rid of, or for a dark, basement courtyard that only sees a sliver of sunlight“. The BBC Gardeners’ World website has some planting suggestions: “It works well with with other shade lovers such as Euphorbia amygdaloides var. robbiae, and under deciduous trees alongside dwarf spring-flowering bulbs.” It will grow well in sunshine and semi-shade too. Plants are easy to propagate by division and can be grown from seed (sown in late autumn).

The seeds are attractive to birds, especially Blackbirds, which eat them late in the winter. But don’t be tempted to try them. The whole plant – like other irises – is poisonous to humans and contains the toxic isoflavone iridin. Eating small quantities of the plant can cause “extreme discomfort” and symptoms of iridin poisoning in humans include vomiting and bloody diarrhoea and there are records of poisoning in pigs, which died when eating the exposed rhizomes, and in cattle, where some calves died after eating irises in a garden border (note 2).

“Foetidissima” refers to the plant’s unpleasant smell.

If you bruise or tear a Stinking Iris leaf it has a strange smell, described as “roast beef, foetid, or of sweetly acrid meat which is a bit ‘high’” and “rotten raw beef“. I can detect this beefiness. I wouldn’t exactly describe it as ‘Stinking” but it isn’t delightful either, just rather odd. Be a bit careful when handling the plant – the RHS recommends that you “wear gloves and wash hands after handling” and Cooper & Johnson warn that the sap can irritate the skin and even cause blistering (note 2).

Stinking Iris is a member of the Iridaceae (Iris family). It is one of two native species of Iris in the British Isles. The other is the Yellow Flag, Iris pseudacorus, which is better known for its bright yellow flowers. In the Western Isles of Scotland it is a favourite haunt of Corncrakes.

Other names for Iris foetidissima include Scarlet-berry Iris, Gladdon, Gladwin Iris, Roast-beef Plant, and Stinking Gladwin. “Gladdon” and “gladwin” refer to the sword-like leaves (from the Latin ‘gladius‘, note 3).

There are a few cultivars of Iris foetidissima that are worth looking out for. Alys Fowler mentions a golden-seeded variant which sounds lovely (‘Golden Seeded’ or ‘Golden Gobbet’) and there is also ‘FructuAlbo’, whose seeds are “polished white ones that sit inside the furry interior of the seed head like brilliant pearls“. Unusual leaf forms include striped (‘Variegata’) and yellow (‘Paul’s Gold’) . There is also a dwarf form.

Stinking Iris flowers are normally a mix of dull shades of mauve, blue, yellow and white.

Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima

Iris foetidissima – typical form. Topcroft churchyard, Norfolk.

Alys Fowler mentions a form with yellow flowers, ‘Citrina’. I think this is what I saw on the Isle of Wight in May 2019 and, more recently, at New Buckenham church in Norfolk.

Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima

Stinking Iris, Iris foetidissima – form ‘Citrina’, I think. New Buckenham churchyard, Norfolk.

Notes

Note 1 – Stinking Iris was first recorded in Belgium as recently as 2008. The plant is thought to have escaped from cultivation, but the Manual of the Alien Plants of Belgium website says that “a natural range extension [from northern France], cannot be ruled out”.

Note 2 – M. R. Cooper and A. W. Johnson (1988): “Poisonous Plants & Fungi – An illustrated guide”, HMSO, London.

The chemical that causes blistering is Irisquinone. It closely related to Primin, the substance that causes contact dermatitis in some species of Primula.

Note 3 – As in ‘gladiator‘. Another plant in the Iris family (Iridaceae) is Gladiolus, which means “little sword”, again from the shape of the leaves.

Posted in Ornamental, Poisonous | Tagged Gladdon, Gladwin, Iris foetidissima, Roast-beef Plant, Stinking Iris

Ten Years of Jeremy Bartlett’s LET IT GROW blog

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 5 January, 2022 by Jeremy Bartlett1 May, 2022

It has been ten years since I started this blog, back in January 2012, and I have now written 252 blog posts, including this one.

After an initial flurry of activity, I now try to write something about once a month.

Most of my blog posts are about a specific plant or fungus but I have also written about gardening in general (see Gardening For Wildlife and Why You Should Ditch Peat) and specific gardening projects, such as creating a wildflower meadow,  building a raised bed, growing a pot of cornfield annuals or making a tiny roof garden. I also wrote about community gardening projects I was involved in, such as Grapes Hill Community Garden (2009 – 2013) and The Belvedere Centre (2011 – 2013).

The first plant I wrote about was my Bird of Paradise flower (Strelitzia reginae), growing in a pot in my office. It eventually became too big and I gave it to a firm of financial advisers (Investing Ethically) to grow in their large, light office, where it is thriving and is currently in flower again.

Bird Of Paradise Flower

My Bird Of Paradise Flower, Strelitzia reginae, January 2012.

Strelitzia reginae

The same plant in January 2022. Photo credit: Investing Ethically.

Other plants have been and gone too. When we moved house in 2013 we brought our Gunnera manicata with us. It grew and grew and provided a lovely focal point by the pond in our gravel garden. But it also drank huge quantities of water and eventually we’d return from a day out in summer to a wilting giant. It was great to have grown it but difficult to look after it properly and justify its thirst in a drought-ridden part of the country. I eventually gave it away (in several pieces) to friends with more suitable places to grow it.

Gunnera manicata

Gunnera manicata in the back garden, June 2016.

I had a couple of attempts to grow Dragon Arum (Dracunculus vulgaris) but although the plants flowered stinkily and magnificently they proved to be short-lived. Other plants only lasted a couple of years, including my Society Garlic (Tulbaghia violacea), Navelwort (Omphalodes cappadocica) and Wild Tulip (Tulipa sylvestris). Again, it has been good to have grown them.

Dragon Arum at the allotment

Dragon Arum at the allotment

Other plants have gone from strength to strength: Mexican Fleabane (Erigeron karvinskianus) and Chocolate Vine (Akebia quinata) are doing well in the front garden. I now have two large specimens of Giant Fleeceflower (Persicaria polymorpha) in the back garden. The ‘Canary Bird’ Rose is magnificent and its flowers continue to attract lots of insects.

Some plants are doing rather too well: Crosswort (Cruciata laevipes) is taking over our wildflower meadow and a couple of flower beds. Saffron (Crocus sativus) cropped spectacularly in 2020 but the clumps are now becoming congested and I need split them and start a new Saffron bed.

Saffron, Crocus sativus

Saffron, Crocus sativus

My gardening style has changed over the last ten years, from “relaxed” to “very relaxed”, and I garden more and more for wildlife and I’ve become more tolerant of some former “weeds”, such as Gallant Soldier (Galinsoga parviflora).

Galinsoga parviflora

Gallant soldier, Galinsoga parviflora

I’ve written about quite few wild flowers and seeing favourites such as Bluebells, Wild Garlic, Viper’s Bugloss, Yellow Loosestrife and Ivy in flower (along with their associated insects) is a highlight of every year.

A female Macropis europaea at work in a Yellow Loosestrife flower.

A female Yellow Loosestrife Bee, Macropis europaea, at work in a Yellow Loosestrife flower.

Other plants have been a special one-off treat, such as Dark-red Helleborines in Cumbria, Oysterplant in Iceland and Orkney, Lizard Orchid in Norfolk and Field Cow-wheat on the Isle of Wight.

Field Cow-wheat, Melampyrum arvense

Field Cow-wheat, Melampyrum arvense

Fungi have featured regularly in my posts, starting with Chicken Of the Woods (Laetiporus sulphureus) and most recently with Wrinkled Peach (Rhodotus palmatus).

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus, on at log at Whitlingham Country Park, Norwich. The log was “tidied up” in 2021 and the fungus is no more.

I haven’t seen Bindweed Rust (Puccinia convolvuli) again nor, thankfully, Bean Anthracnose (Colletotrichum lindemuthianum). I find Pear Rust (Gymnosporangium sabinae) every year on the allotment and in the back garden, but keep it under control by picking and removing infected leaves. Ash Dieback is now widespread.

Agaricus devoniensis

Dune Roundhead, Stropharia halophila (originally misidentified as Agaricus devoniensis in my Sand Dune Fungi post). Thanks to Marco Contu from Sardinia for the correction.

I occasionally update my blog posts to correct a mistake or if new information becomes available but most posts are a snapshot of what I knew at the time.

Unspotted or Suffolk Lungwort, Pulmonaria obscura

Unspotted or Suffolk Lungwort, Pulmonaria obscura. An update to my post on Lungwort.

Sadly, some of the books I’ve referred to are now out of print and some websites are no longer there. I especially miss the Poison Garden Website (thepoisongarden.co.uk), which gave a wealth of information for several posts (such as Hemlock Water Dropwort) but no longer exists. (Update 1st May 2022: Good news! I’ve just discovered that the Poison Garden Website has been archived.)

Hemlock Water Dropwort, Oenanthe crocata

Hemlock Water Dropwort, Oenanthe crocata. Isle of Wight, May 2016.

Thanks to everyone who has written to me in the last ten years, to correct me, ask for further advice or to thank me for writing the blog. (The latter is always unexpected and appreciated.) I’ve enjoyed writing about plants and fungi and I hope to be able to do so for some time yet.

In the meantime, Happy New Year!

Here is a List of All My Blog Posts, in descending date order.

Posted in General | Tagged ten years

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 29 December, 2021 by Jeremy Bartlett15 November, 2022

The Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus, has been described as “a strong contender for the title ‘Most Beautiful British Mushroom’“, and rightly so.

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

In 2019 I found my first specimens of Wrinkled Peach growing on a large rotting log at Whitlingham Country Park, just a few miles bike ride from home. I visited a couple of times that year and went back in mid October 2020. This time the fruit bodies were in even better condition and were weeping a bright red liquid from their stems, almost like blood. This phenomenon is known as guttation (note 1). It was a rather damp day – the clear liquid dripping from the cap in the photograph below is rainwater.

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

Since my first sighting of Wrinkled Peach I have found several more specimens when out on walks in Norfolk, including beside Peddars’ Way near Holme-next-the-Sea and, just a week ago, at Bath Hills near Bungay. All were growing on old logs, probably elm.

Young Wrinkled Peach fruit bodies have a network of interconnected ridges on the cap, as in the specimen below (note 2).

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

A young Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus, showing the wrinkled cap.

But later in the autumn (by November or December) this is a lot less obvious, though the pale peachy colour persists. The cap is always rubbery in texture.

Wrinkled Peach, Rodotus palmatus

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus. December 2021, Bath Hills, near Bungay.

The Wrinkled Peach has adnate to free, moderately spaced pink gills on the underside of the cap and the paler pink stem, which has no ring and is covered in whitish fibrils (small flecks or strands of fibrous material).

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus, showing gills and stem.

The Wrinkled Peach has an “indistinct” odour (which I’ve never actually noticed). Others have described its smell as “delicately fruity, likened by some to peach or apricot” and some people can detect an unbearably bad smell (note 3). The fungus apparently tastes bitter and this, combined with its rubbery texture means it is best regarded as inedible.

Rhodotus palmatus is a type of Basidiomycete fungus and a member of the family Physalacriaceae. The most well known genus in the family is Armillaria (various species of Honey Fungus) (note 4). There is just the one species of Rhodotus, R. palmatus. The fungus was originally called Agaricus palmatus, before being transferred to its current genus in 1926. Other English names include Rosy Veincap and Netted Rhodotus.

Fairly fresh dead elm (Ulmus) is the preferred host although Wrinkled Peach will grow on other hardwoods too, such as Ash (Fraxinus) and Horse Chestnut (Aesculus) in Europe  and species of Acer (maple) and Tilia (lime/basswood) and Liriodendron (Tulip Tree) elsewhere.

In the British Isles, you are most likely to find Rhodotus palmatus in southern and central England and Wales (there are 753 records on the NBN Atlas website at the time of writing). The species has a circumboreal distribution and also occurs in other parts of Europe, northern Africa, eastern North America and Asia (note 5).

Dutch Elm Disease caused the death of around 30 million elms in Britain from the mid 1970s to early 1980s and large elm trees are largely a thing of the past in much of the British Isles (note 6). The sudden abundance of dead elm wood resulted in an increase in Rhodotus palmatus but dead elm logs are now much rarer.

Rhodotus palmatus is consequently in decline and is in over half of the European fungal Red Lists. It is legally protected in Hungary and is “extinct or probably extinct” in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.

One of the recommended actions to conserve Rhodotus palmatus is to preserve dead wood of fallen trees, not only in forests but also in parkland and urban areas where elm or ash trees die.

But not everyone appreciates this.

When I went back to Whitlingham Country Park in late October this year the log where I’d found my fungi in 2019 and 2020 had gone, presumably “tidied up” by grounds staff (note 7).

Notes

Note 1 – This shedding of liquid is known as guttation and tends to occur when the fruit body is growing rapidly. Some fungi are very prone to this and the appearance of the liquid can be a useful identification feature. Different fungi exude different coloured fluids: while the Wrinkled Peach oozes red liquid, the Oak Bracket I found in September was oozing something resembling runny honey.

Note 2 – There are lots of much better photographs of this wrinkling, such as on the First Nature , Messiah University and Wild Food UK websites.

Note 3 – On a cold day it can be hard to detect odours from fungi and flowers.

Breathing gently on the flower or fungus can help, as for Witch Hazel flowers, but sometimes I have to pick a mushroom and bring it home in a sealed container before I can detect its scent.

Even the Stinking Earthfan (Thelephora palmata) we found in November in the Norfolk Brecks (described as “a candidate for stinkiest fungus in the forest“), didn’t smell until I breathed on it. Its distinctive garlicky, cabbagy odour only became obvious when I brought a piece home. (I actually quite like the smell, but only because I like garlicky cabbage.)

Another complication is that I am quite suggestible when it comes to smells. If someone asks me whether I can detect a particular odour, I often think I can.

Note 4 – Species of Armillaria cause white rot root disease and some species can be very destructive pathogens on a variety of woody plants. The world’s largest known organism is a  specimen of Armillaria ostoyae in Oregon in the United States, which covers more than 3.4 square miles (8.8 square kilometres) and is between 1900 and 9600 years old.

Note 5 – The Amazing Life website suggests that its fractured distribution is highly unusual for a single species unless it is being cultivated. It suggests that Rhodotus palmatus might have arrived in new areas via trade ships selling hardwood, which the fungus uses as a host.

Note 6 – Dutch Elm Disease is caused by two species of fungus: Ophiostoma novo-ulmi and Ophiostoma ulmi.

The first outbreak was caused by Ophiostoma ulmi and was first observed in north-west Europe from about 1910. The disease probably came from Asia but the “Dutch” name stuck because the fungus was first described by Dutch scientists.

A second, much more serious outbreak, was caused by Ophiostoma novo-ulmi and occurred from the 1960s onwards.

Fungal spores are spread by elm bark beetles, especially Scolytus scolytus, the Large Elm Bark Beetle. Trees are only infected once their bark is substantial enough to attract the beetles, so we still have lots of young and suckering elms. Once a tree is infected, it plugs up its own xylem vessels, cutting off water and nutrients and leading to its death.

See the Forest Research website for lots more useful information.

Note 7 – … Along with its community of other fungi, mosses and invertebrates. Hopefully the fungus still occurs in the area. James Emerson found more fruit bodies in nearby Trowse Woods, back in 2014. He also found the fungus at Catton Park, just north of Norwich, shortly before Christmas.

In mid November 2022 I visited some woods just to the east of where I’d seen my original Wrinkled Peach and found some more fruitbodies on old Elm logs, much to my joy.

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus

Wrinkled Peach, Rhodotus palmatus.

Posted in Fungi | Tagged Rhodotus palmatus, Wrinkled Peach

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Thirty latest posts

  • Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa 29 March, 2026
  • Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus 27 February, 2026
  • Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule 10 January, 2026
  • Zythia resinae (aka Sarea resinae) 30 December, 2025
  • Golden Conecap, Conocybe aurea 20 November, 2025
  • Five Fungi from Sweet Briar Marshes 23 October, 2025
  • Steccherinum oreophilum (aka Irpex oreophilus) – new for Norfolk 27 September, 2025
  • Orpine, Hylotelephium telephium 29 August, 2025
  • Wild Marjoram, Origanum vulgare 19 July, 2025
  • Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus 5 June, 2025
  • Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus 28 May, 2025
  • American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus 21 April, 2025
  • Cedar Cup, Geopora sumneriana 16 March, 2025
  • Cinnamon Bracket, Hapalopilus nidulans 13 February, 2025
  • Common Ragwort, Jacobaea vulgaris 13 January, 2025
  • Holly, Ilex aquifolium 7 December, 2024
  • Yellow Bird’s-nest, Hypopitys monotropa 24 November, 2024
  • Whiskery Milkcap, Lactarius mairei 8 November, 2024
  • Shaggy Bracket, Inonotus hispidus 25 September, 2024
  • Small Teasel, Dipsacus pilosus 24 August, 2024
  • Rothole Inkcap, Coprinopsis alnivora 1 August, 2024
  • Twinflower, Linnaea borealis 20 July, 2024
  • Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea 10 June, 2024
  • Beaked Hawk’s-beard, Crepis vesicaria 15 May, 2024
  • Thrift, Armeria maritima 17 April, 2024
  • Japanese Kerria, Kerria japonica 29 March, 2024
  • Golden Bootleg, Phaeolepiota aurea 12 March, 2024
  • Arched Earthstar, Geastrum fornicatum 22 February, 2024
  • Basil Thyme, Clinopodium acinos 3 January, 2024
  • Five Fungi from the Lanes of Norfolk 9 December, 2023


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