| ABOUT
BAMBOO
Family Matters
Bamboos are members of the grass
family - and there is no doubt in our minds that they belong to the
aristocratic side of it. We think that no other plant can match
either their simple elegance or versatility. There are over a
thousand species, (with more being discovered all the time) and they
range in size from dwarf varieties just 10 or 20 centimetres high -
perfect for groundcover and rockeries - to towering giants 15 metres
tall that create a monumental vertical accent in the landscape.
Gracious, Hard-Working,
Noble Plants
No
matter what their size, all are decorative, graceful plants. We
cannot decide which we like better: their pointed, rustling leaves,
made all the more exquisite by fine, parallel veins; or their
decorative stems (or culms, to be exact) with raised joints and
startling colours. Bamboos culms can be an intriguing selection of
tones: pale honey, warm yellow, bright green, dark green, dusty
blue, deep crimson, near-purple and sophisticated black. Many are
striped and some are spotted!
What's more, bamboos are evergreen,
frost-resistant - and largely untroubled by pests and diseases. They
can be grown as dramatic, solitary specimens, in combination with
other plants, as groundcover or even as a hedge.
Bamboos are native to all the major
continents, except for Europe, but most of those in cultivation come
from Japan or China, where for centuries they have held an honoured
place. In Chinese thinking, the bamboo symbolises longevity,
durability and endurance, and is one of "The Four Gentlemen of
the Garden", along with the orchid, plum blossom and the
chrysanthemum.
Runners and Clumpers
The
"tree grasses" (as they were sometimes known) were sent
back to Europe by Victorian collectors around the middle of the
nineteenth century and some species have since become naturalised
here. Perhaps it's because of the enthusiastic spread of some of
those clumps that bamboos have gained a reputation of being invasive
bullies. But we never have a problem controlling ours. Varieties
with running rhizomes are planted next to a path, at the edge of a
lawn (where any interloping shoots can be mown down), in pots or
surrounded by a rhizome barrier.
Yet many bamboos are not
"runners" at all, instead they are well-behaved
"clumpers", increasing slowly into densely clustered
clumps that inch out from the parent rhizome.
Useful Plants
Although
we prefer to see our bamboo growing in the ground or in beautiful
containers, we're happy to report that it has a multitude of uses
other than horticultural. From the ripened canes come all manner of
items including furniture, pipes, wind chimes, chop sticks and
scaffolding, while the shoots of some varieties are edible.
Meanwhile, the leaves can be fabricated into paper and even
clothing, as one writer noted in 1896: "the labourers in the
rice fields go about looking like animated haycocks in waterproof
coats made of the dried leaves of Bamboo sewn together."
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© Stam's Bamboo
Nursery Ltd 2001 (disclaimer)
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