Guest lettuce Posted on August 30, 2023

How we come to have a wild lettuce in our tiny front garden I don’t know, but at ten feet high there is no ignoring it. Lactuca virosa is its name. At first, in March, it looked rather like a stripling primrose, with long oblong slightly toothed leaves. These mounded up, and by April clearly had higher ambitions. It grew steadily, its long leaves at intervals of a foot or so on its straight stem. It had a useful prop in the myrtle supported by our neighbour’s wall. At ten feet or so it produced an impressive panicle of tiny yellow flowers quickly followed by fluffy seedheads a little like clematis seeds,

Sadly it tastes bitter. No, worse than that. I shan’t be exploring its supposed psychedelic properties. But I wonder where it came from.

Hugh’s Gardening Books

Trees

Trees was first published in 1973 as The International Book of Trees, two years after The World Atlas of Wine….

Hugh’s Wine Books

The Story of Wine – From Noah to Now

A completely new edition published by the Academie du Vin Library: When first published in 1989 The Story of Wine won every…

Friends of Trad

The Garden Museum