Figure 8. An average self-sown seedling of S. cepaea invading a potted magnolia (about twice natural size). Photographs by the author.
Sedum cepaea is said to be widespread through central and southern Europe to Turkey, Crete and North Africa, and in the UK is naturalised in parts of Bucking-hamshire. Dioscorides (Gunther 1954: 393) called it KEPAIA, but the significance of the name is not clear: it is more likely to be from the Greek KEPOS, a garden, than from CEPA, an onion. He likens it to purslane (Portulaca oleracea) and tells us that the leaves "drank with wine doe help ye strangury-sick [painful urination], and such as have a scabbed bladder." Don't try this at home! The earliest British record seems to be Parkinson's of 1640, quoted from Mattioli (see Figure 10). He gives a bit of practical gardening advice: "If it rise not of the shed seede (which usually it doth if it be suffered to fall) it must bee new sowne every yeare". "Interesting but not very exciting", was the verdict of Will Ingwersen on Sedum cepaea in his Sedum booklet of 1944, but nurserymen are more likely to get excited over perennials with more immediate sales appeal. And there are sedums much less exciting than this (but don't breathe a word to Ray!). | ||
Figure 9. Sedum cepaea at its moment of glory in a cold frame doing its best to smother Delosperma nubigena hybrids |
REFERENCES
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