Goldencup St. John’s-Wort (Hypericum Patulum)

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Goldencup St. John’s-Wort (Hypericum Patulum)

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It was the middle of September, and the wild west Highlands of Scotland had just experienced the dreariest and most dismal summer that Algy or his assistants could remember… Southern Britain had basked in the hottest, driest, sunniest summer for a very long time, while even the east of Scotland had enjoyed plenty of fine warm weather, and it had seemed to Algy that his own wee corner of the world had simply been overlooked and forgotten…
No one beyond the local area seemed to realise that since the third week of May there had been day after day after day… and week after week after week… and month after month after month… of nothing but cloud and wind and rain. There had even been an exceptionally strong summer storm at the beginning of August which had destroyed most of the leaves on the trees long before their time to fall, turning what had been a lush green canopy, fed by all the rain, into a desolate swathe of dead brown leaves, which quickly dropped to the ground. And after storm Floris had passed, even the hillsides looked totally dead…
And so, for day after week after month, Algy had watched and waited… and waited and watched, feeling less and less fluffy as time went on and nothing seemed to change…
But now the desolate summer was over at last, for the world had turned, and although the wind and the rain showed little sign of leaving the wild west Highlands in peace, this felt rather more normal in mid-September. All of a sudden, Algy began to recover some of his usual fluffiness.
Observing that some of the plants in his assistants' garden had escaped the ravages of the storm, and others had managed to effect some recovery in the six weeks of rain since storm Floris had passed, Algy ventured out on a slightly drier morning and found that there were plenty of green leaves and a new flush of flowers in the more sheltered areas of the garden.
Hopping up into a hypericum bush, whose yellow flowers Algy loved because they matched his hair, he settled down among the damp leaves and began to think of all the friends around the world from whom he had been separated by the gloom of the past few months… and as he reflected on all that had been happening during that time, in the great wide world beyond his home, Algy realised that many of his friends might well be feeling gloomy too, albeit for different reasons from his own…
So, instructing his assistant to prepare to take a pretty picture of him perching in the bush, Algy fluffed up his feathers, lifted up his head, and started to sing to the world beyond, even though he could tell that in his own wee sphere it would very shortly start to rain again:
Bring me all of your dreams, You dreamers. Bring me all of your Heart melodies That I may wrap them In a blue cloud-cloth Away from the too rough fingers Of the world.
[Algy is singing the poem The Dream Keeper by the 20th century African American poet Langston Hughes.]
Hypericum
Montreal Botanical Garden, 09.2025
Hypericum..conosciuta anche con il nome si erba si San Giovanni.
mood-lifting

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Hypericum × hidcoteense, St. John's Wort Surrey, UK, June 2025
#3754 - Hypericum androsaemum - Tutsan
AKA shrubby St. John's wort or sweet-amber, and repeatedly placed in it's own genus Androsaemum, and redescribed as multiple species in both. Hypericum derives from the Greek for "above pictures" refers to the practice of hanging the flower above icons to ward off evil spirits. Androsaemum comes from the Greek for "man's blood" as used to describe plants with red sap. Tutsan derives from the French phrase tout-saine, 'heal-all', in reference to the plant's alleged medicinal properties. Sweet-amber refers to the ambergris-like aroma when the red oil glands on the leaves are crushed
Native to Western Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, and a weed everywhere else where it was grown as an ornamental. The seed and leaf-tip eating moth Lathronympha strigana and the leaf-feeding beetle Chrysolina abchasica show promise as biological control agents.
Uniquely for the genus, Tutsan berries stay fleshy and turn black when ripe.
Woodhaugh Gardens, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand
Summer flowers blooming in the garden