Pursuits Hallelujah! Days are longer, fair-weather gardeners are emerging from their burrows and green shoots are shooting everywhere.
Hellebore-hunters are active. Galanthophile gurus are on their hands and knees, rear end uppermost bottomising, says a botanist friend. But Lent lilies and snowdrops aren’t the only flowers.
Of the several winter-flowering honeysuckles - shrubby, steadfast, easily grown, easily sourced - Lonicera fragrantissima unfailingly braves the February elements, sporting small, creamy-white flowers, which are, yes, fragrant. It’s been in British gardens since 1845, when Scottish plant-hunter Robert Fortune hauled it back from one of his China exploits.
A close relative, L x purpusii, is also worthy of a favoured spot, where its perfume can be huffed. It has a couple of named improvements: ‘Spring Romance’ and the similar, exceedingly freeflowering ‘Winter Beauty’. Go…