Plants & Gardening
Garden Stories
A Paranormal Perennial
I appreciate any cultivar name that invokes thoughts of my favorite holiday: Halloween.
It is fun to stumble upon some , , or and suddenly wonder, What should my costume be this year? One perennial in particular has a designation so dark, it can conjure up a gruesome ghost story:
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum Lady in Black Side-flowering aster
A late-fall frost, not ghostly images, sets off Symphyotrichum lateriflorum Lady in Black. Image courtesy Northcreek Nursery
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum Lady in Black was by Richard Hawke, plant evaluation manager at the 窪蹋勛圖厙. The straight species, S. lateriflorum, was also among the seven, so you can see that this is one of the best asters for your garden.
The foliage of Lady in Black is an almost black-purple color, enhanced in autumn by numerous sprays of teeny white daisies with pinkish-purple centers. A location in full sun or partial sun will produce the darkest foliage.
Side-flowered asters can grow three feet tall, and a striking effect is to plant it in front of Blackhaw viburnum (Viburnum prunifolium) or any other shrub with amazing fall color.
Lady in Black also happens to be the popular name for a mournful soul who haunts Fort Warren, located on Georges Island in Boston Harbor.
The myth goes like this:
In 1862, Mrs. Melanie Lanier of South Carolina tried to rescue her husband, who had been imprisoned at the fort during the Civil War. On a stormy night in January, she rowed across the freezing water with nothing more than a pickax and an old pistol. She chopped off her hair and disguised herself in mens clothing. She snuck her way to the prison cells and signaled to her husband by whistling a Southern refrain. He signaled back, and quickly she found a way to squeeze through the bars of his cell window.
Worried about seeing the Lady in Black?
: In Victorian times, seeing an owl during the day, finding a single snowdrop flower in your garden, or witnessing a sparrow land on a piano all foretold imminent death.
After weeks of tunneling underground with the pickax, they were discovered. Mrs. Lanier shocked the guards and tried to shoot a Union officer with her pistol. However, the antiquated weapon backfired, and some shrapnel ended up killing her husband. She was captured, tried, and hanged a month later.
Just before her death, she was given a black robe, the closest thing to a dress they could find. Visitors to Georges Island now claim to see a woman in this same black robe. The Lady in Black has been known to appear in photos, and her moans have even scared away fishermen.
Not spooked? might do the trick!
YIKES!
While Im fairly certain that the Dutch breeders who named Symphyotrichum lateriflorum Lady in Black were not familiar with this particular ghost story, you cant help but wonder if they were not aware of some other spirit dressed in dark garb, drifting or moaning down the paths of their garden.
So the next time you notice an eerie cultivar name like Geranium phaeum Stillingfleet Ghost, Hemerocallis Snowy Apparition or , try not to get shivers down your spine.