WATSONIA
Watsonias occur across southern Africa. There are a range of colours and heights.
They are usually treated as on the borderlines of hardiness, but they seem to be reasonably robust
as long as they are planted fairly deeply. There are a large number of species, but in cultivation
their identification is confused by the presence of a large number of hybrids.
Peter Goldblatt has written a great monograph on "The Genus Watsonia" (Annals of Kirstenbosch
Botanic Garden, vol 19). Many of my plants do not key out as the correct species, but I have kept
them under the name they arrived with, while I get them sorted out.
2007. During this year I have been keeping all the plants in pots very much wetter, treating them as bog plants, and it is making a big difference to their growth. A number
of forms that had been quite miffy in pots are now burgeoning, and it is forcing me to rethink my approach to some of the South African Iridaceae (which is no bad thing).
Watsonia aletroides
Watsonia borbonica ssp ardernei 'Ardernes White'
Watsonia borbonica ssp borbonica
Watsonia densiflora
Watsonia 'Flame'
Watsonia galpinii
Watsonia gladioloides
Watsonia humilis
Watsonia hysterantha
Watsonia knysnana
Watsonia (knysnana x pillansii)
Watsonia meriana ssp bulbillifera
Watsonia meriana ssp bulbillifera 'Red'
Watsonia meriana ssp bulbillifera 'Tangerine'
Watsonia 'Mount Congreve Coral'
Watsonia pillansii
Watsonia pillansii JCA 3.593.609
Watsonia pillansii 'Pink Form'
Watsonia pillansii 'White Form'
Watsonia 'Pink Hybrid'
Watsonia 'Stanford Scarlet'
Watsonia tabularis
Watsonia 'Tresahor Apricot'
Watsonia 'Tresco Dwarf Pink'
Watsonia vanderspuyae
Watsonia versfeldii
Watsonia wilmaniae