DaleDucatte.com

"Pay attention to the world." -- Susan Sontag
 

Campernelle Daffodils

From “Hybrids of the Jonquil Group” in Daffodils and Narcissi: A Complete Guide to the Narcissus Family by Michael James Jefferson-Brown:

“Sheltering under the specific name N. odorus bestowed by Linnaeus are a series of hybrid plants, probably all arising from N. pseudo-narcissus ร— N. jonquilla, that has long been grown in gardens. N. odorus is the plant also known as the Campernelle Jonquil. In stature it is somewhat larger than N. jonquilla, has broader channelled dark green leaves and flower stems that carry an umbel of larger flowers than those of N. jonquilla with broader petals and a larger lobed cup….

“This larger plant is a very free-flowering variety of exceptional value in the border as well as in the rock garden. It is tall, reaching a foot in height, with erect, dark green shining foliage and many-headed stems of bright golden flowers. It will produce such quantities of bloom that a drift or clump of plants will remain a picture for a long period….”

From “Border Flowers” in Flowers and Their Histories by Alice M. Coats:

“The Jonquil section consists of those small, round-leaved, sweet-scented narcissi that take their name from the Spanish junquillo, a rush; and as in the case of the other groups, the principal species were already cultivated in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. [John] Gerard grew N. jonquilla, and [John] Parkinson added the double form, and three varieties of the larger Campernelle Jonquil, N. odorus.”

From “Spring” in Singed Leaves: A Book of Haiku Poetry by Marshall Hryciuk:

the orange barely inside
              the yellow jonquil

screech of the nighthawk


Hello!

This post contains a series of photographs of a daffodil species I’ve often encountered at Oakland Cemetery that I recently learned is most likely Narcissus x odorus, commonly known as the Campernelle Daffodil. The plant’s status as a hybrid — as described above, of Narcissus pseudo-narcissus and Narcissus jonquilla — means there’s some ambiguity in my identification, given how many daffodil crosses there are. But the plant does visually demonstrate characteristics of the known hybrid, especially the size and shape of the flower bloom, its coloration, and the rush-like leaves surrounding each blooming stem.

The term “rushes” (from “jonquil” or the Spanish word “junquillo”) describes the plant’s slender leaves, which vary from somewhat flat to cylindrical, often displaying — as many daffodil leaves do — a blend of green and aqua blue colors. The abundant blooms — mixed among the plant’s tall leaves at about the same height — display single shades of yellow regardless of lighting conditions. Their tendency to wave in a breeze as they bend toward the sun creates moving dots of color filling the scene where I photographed them. The flowers themselves are smaller than those of many daffodils, but are large for daffodils in the jonquil division — which helps explain why they’re sometimes called Giant Jonquils instead of Campernelles.

Of daffodils that have posed for me at Oakland, this variant shows the most consistent yellow color between the petals and corona. To the extent that some of the flowers appear to show shades of orange, that’s typically how we interpret darker or more shadowed yellow color — yellow itself containing tones that vary from a pale color to one just inside the range of colors we see as orange. When I examine the colors of the flower petals in Lightroom, Lightroom finds orange only in the darkest sections of the flower and in just a few pixels — “the orange barely visible” as in the Haiku I included above — and that orange disappears if you tip the flower toward the light.

I hadn’t really planned it this way, but the last two series of posts along with this one constitute a “walking tour” of one of Oakland’s named sections: Bell Tower Ridge, designated that way because its geographic elevation is higher than the rest of the property, and it’s adjacent to the 1899 Bell Tower that was recently rehabilitated from a visitor center to an event space.

Through the photographs, we stepped our way from Lady Banks’ Rose at the intersection near the Bell Tower building…

… to the Duncan memorial with white double Narcissus tazetta daffodils, where we noted the presence of an aged gazebo…

… to pass by the gazebo and find it located within the subject of this post, with Campernelle Daffodils as border plants to one of Oakland’s most recognizable buildings, the E. W. Marsh Mausoleum — an example of Gothic Revival architecture constructed in 1890 and featuring two six-foot-tall bronze urns at its entrance.

The contrast in scale between the relatively small, scattered groups of Campernelles and the monuments they accentuate could very well have been intentional. It was common in the decades of the cemetery’s founding and early Victorian garden design to incorporate landscaping and border plants to emulate wild-like conditions. This approach would create visual characteristics blending the dominating stone monuments and structures with soft, colorful forms from he natural world, where daffodils would occupy sunnier boundary regions and proliferate in somewhat random clumps. The 1894 book The Wild Garden by William Robinson — highly influential in the decades aligned with Oakland’s development — described this approach as “Narcissus meadow gardening” where daffodil varieties were planted to bloom in succession, in large volumes, and left to propagate unimpeded. As Robinson explained (with jonquil daffodils and Narcissus poeticus as examples):

“A very delightful feature of the Narcissus meadow gardening is the way great groups follow each other in the fields. When the Star Narcissi begin to fade a little in their beauty the Poets follow, and as I write this paper we have the most beautiful picture I have ever seen in cultivation….

“Five years ago I cleared a little valley of various fences, and so opened a pretty view. Through the meadow runs a streamlet. We grouped the Poet’s Narcissus near it, and through a grove of Oaks on a rising side of the field. We have had some beauty every year since; but this year, the plants having become established, or very happy for some other reason, the whole thing was a picture such as one might see in an Alpine valley!

“The flowers were large and beautiful when seen near at hand, and the effect in the distance delightful. This may, perhaps, serve to show that this kind of work will bring gardening into a line with art, and that the artist need not be for ever divorced from the garden, by geometrical patterns which cannot possibly interest anybody accustomed to drawing beautiful forms and scenes. I need say no more to show the good qualities of this group of plants for wild gardening, many places having much greater advantages than mine for showing their beauty in the rich stretches of grass by pleasure-ground walks. Various kinds of places may be adorned by Narcissi in this way — meadows, woods, copses, wood walks, and drives through ornamental woodland and pleasure grounds….”

Campernelles are heirloom daffodils, so their history as old garden plants also aligns with both Robinson’s garden design concepts and how Victorian gardens and garden memorials evolved, and they would have been thought of as heirlooms in the decades leading to the rise of Victorian gardens. If the relationships between these subjects interest you, the article Heirloom โ€˜Campernelleโ€™ has a nice overview of the plant’s history and its use, as well as several photos showing the kind of placement we see at Oakland — where clusters of plants create color and structure in the landscape but the plants are still permitted to venture out on their own and propagate wildly.

Thanks for reading and taking a look!












White Double Daffodils (2 of 2)

From “Daffodil: Spring’s Messenger” in The Story of Flowers: And How They Changed the Way We Live by Noel Kingsbury:

“At the turn of the nineteenth century William Herbert, a lifelong enthusiastic plant-breeder, made a study of daffodils, showing through experimental breeding that they hybridized naturally. This contributed to his developing a version of the theory of evolution, decades before Charles Darwin. Another country cleric, George Engleheart, later in the century, played a crucial role in the development of the modern daffodil; his โ€˜Will Scarlettโ€™, with its dramatic orange cup, was quite unlike anything else that had been seen, and led to a whole new vein of breeding. Daffodil-growing took a leap forwards in the late nineteenth century, when two key British gardeners, William Robinson and Gertrude Jekyll, showed how easy it was to plant them in rough grass and watch them come up year after year. This helped to stimulate major commercial development in the century that followed….

“The white, heavily scented N. tazetta has been found in ancient Egyptian tombs and was mentioned by classical writers: Homer, Virgil and Ovid. The Silk Road took it to China, where it has long been used in the Spring Festival. Pockets of it naturalized all along the route.

“The botanical name commemorates the Greek legend of Narcissus, who fell in love with his own reflection; this is also possibly a reference to the plantโ€™s supposed (although not well documented) narcotic properties. The scent of some species is indeed so strong that people can be overcome by headaches. The range of species is wide, and includes a number of flower shapes, although all have the distinctive trumpet-like corona, which early twenty-first-century research indicates is unique to
Narcissus.”

From “Spring in the South” by Davie M. Herndon in Our World’s Most Beloved Poems, edited by John Campbell:

Crocus blooming at the mailbox,
Yards brightened up with yellow bells,
White spirea and snowy bridal wreath โ€”
That Spring is here it’s easy to tell.

White narcissus and snowdrops small,
Hosts of golden daffodils,
Hyacinths in their waxen hues
All the air their perfume fills.

Tulip trees burst in lilac bloom
While in many hues azaleas dress;
And all the vari-colored bulbs
Through the warm earth gently press.

Camellias nestle on dark green stems โ€”
Pink, white, rose-all three of these;
Wisteria of lavendar and deep purple shade
Drooping gracefully from tall pine trees.

Lawns all abloom wherever you look โ€”
Blossoming dogwoods grace every way,
Heavily laden as with myriad snowflakes โ€”
Hasn’t God made a beautiful display?


Hello!

This is the second of two posts with photos of white double Narcissus tazetta daffodils that I took at Oakland Cemetery on March 30. The first post is White Double Daffodils (1 of 2).

In this post, we take a closer look at the flower structures — a bee’s eye view! — showing how the plants produce inflorescence that may cluster horizontally or vertically or assemble into tiny bouquets. In some cases — when a flower is more isolated from the rest of the gang — it may develop a single bloom atop a sturdy stem or arc gracefully toward the light if the bloom is large and heavy. And as I explained in the previous post, you can also see how each one contains the yellow/orange rippled remnants of what would have been a recognizable corona in a daffodil that had not evolved into a double form.

I selected the poem at the top of the post because of its visual intensity and the way it quite accurately represents the sequential timeline of flowers blooming in the southeast — from the late winter appearance of crocus and spirea, through the early and middle spring appearance of the remaining plants the poet describes. Of course I also noticed that I’ve photographed all but two of the plants included in the poem — mainly at Oakland, but some in my own yard — and posted them here over the past few years. I added links to those tagged posts throughout the poem, if you’d like to explore more of my photography and writing in that somewhat random way.

Thanks for taking a look!










White Double Daffodils (1 of 2)

From “Daffodil Definitions” in Daffodil: The Remarkable Story of the World’s Most Popular Spring Flower by Noel Kingsbury:

“The genus Narcissus is one of some sixty in the family Amaryllidaceae, which also includes snowdrops, clivia, and of course Amaryllis. What sets Narcissus apart is the cup or corona….

“The standard pattern for flowers is for them to be made up of four whorls of tissue: sepals (which often form the protective bud), petals, stamens (carrying male pollen-bearing organs), and carpels (protecting the female organ)…. Debate among botanists has raged since the middle of the nineteenth century about whether the corona is derived from the stamens or the perianth segments; similar structures can be seen in other members of the amaryllis family, although it is thought that they arose independently. Now, it appears as if the question has been solved — the daffodil cup is a structure that has evolved independently of either perianth segments or stamens and is unique to the daffodil. What evolutionary advantage it serves remains open to question
possibly it helps directs pollinating insects or protects the stamens from rain.

“There are some seventy species of
Narcissus, although some botanists might reduce this to fifty, and others increase to a hundred. As with many plant genera, there are a few species spread over a large area and a ‘centre of diversity,’ where a small area includes a much larger number of localised species. For the daffodil, that centre of diversity is the mountains of the Iberian peninsula (i.e., Spain and Portugal) and the mountains just across the water in the Maghreb (i.e., Morocco and Algeria). Only one species, N. pseudonarcissus, has a really wide distribution in western Europe; N. poeticus (the familiar pheasantโ€™s eye) and the white N. serotinus are found across the regions immediately north of the Mediterranean, while the heavily fragrant white N. tazetta is found further eastwards around the Mediterranean into Iran.”

From “White Narcissus” in Sunlight and Shadows by Mabel Clare Thomas:

Winds across my garden,
Damp and chill,
Bring a breath of Springtime
To my window sill
From the ivory chalices,
Filled with gold,
Of my first narcissus
Braving the cold.

Other flowers sleeping
In their beds,
Miss the fragile beauty
Above their heads
Where my white narcissus,
Harbinger of Spring,
Dances with the breezes
While the robins sing.


Hello!

This is the first of two posts with photos of a double form of the well-known daffodil Narcissus tazetta that I took at Oakland Cemetery on March 30. Each photo is of one or more flowers integrated into the memorial display shown below, one that represents a very typical and complex Victorian garden arrangement with a raised platform, large and richly surfaced stone walls, access steps, and varied plant populations providing visual interest with contrasting colors and textures.

This location is just a few steps beyond that of the Lady Banks’ Rose (Rosa banksiae var. lutea) I wrote about previously (see Discovering (and Rediscovering) Lady Banksโ€™ Rose (3 of 4)), and — as you can see here — the Duncan memorial and some of the double Narcissus tazetta flowers are visible from a distance, toward the left side of this image from the earlier post.

This entire section of Oakland includes some of its oldest and most elaborate displays, and any single wider-angle photo necessarily includes elements from more than one memorial plot. The weathered gazebo you can see in the first image — which looks like it’s within the Duncan memorial — is actually part of another family section, shown here, where it is included as a representation of living activity among the headstones, memorial urns, and intricate mausoleum that I’ll write more about later — when I introduce photos of the tiny yellow daffodils providing abundant spring color to this scene.

I included the excerpt from Noel Kingsbury’s Daffodil: The Remarkable Story of the World’s Most Popular Spring Flower because its description of the parts of a flower and the distinctive corona (or cup or trumpet) of many daffodils can help us understand the unique characteristics of a double daffodil. As you can see from the galleries below, these daffodils don’t have coronas. They possess, instead, a genetic variation where the corona has mutated into a layer or layers of flower petals at the center of each bloom, surrounded by several additional rows of white petals. The yellow-orange color you see at the centers of these flowers would have been the corona, were it not for the mutation that caused the plant to essentially reconstruct that corona into petals instead.

This means — as the excerpt also implies — that double daffodils don’t possess the reproductive structures that are present in daffodils with coronas, so even if they attracted pollinator attention, they wouldn’t reproduce by pollination or seed. There is nothing, as it turns out, for the bugs and bees to do — so it’s quite convenient for the double daffodils that they’ve evolved to reproduce by bulb division. This garden space likely contains descendants of original white double daffodils planted decades ago, with succeeding generations enabled by human caretakers digging up and replanting regenerated daffodil bulbs to maintain the landscaping characteristics of this historical design.

Thanks for reading and taking a look!