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Nemesias: A Spring Rival for Pansies – Gardenista

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After the hard bite of winter has loosened its grip on gardens and window boxes in early spring, and frost-nipped green fingers begin to thaw, gardeners are primed to succumb to the lure of instant flowers in four-inch pots. Nemesias, a cold-tolerant annual native to South Africa, are a charming spring filler to combine with the more ubiquitous (but appealing) up-turned faces of pansies and violas. And as the horticultural industry develops more (and more, and more) nemesia hybrids, their colors, form, and even heat-tolerance have expanded to include a rainbow of choice. They are an ultra-pretty, low-fuss plant for window boxes and pots, and even play well with others in larger garden beds.

Photography by Marie Viljoen.

Above: Nemesia cheiranthus, blooming in Nieuwoudtville, South Africa, in spring.

The Nemesia genus occurs natively only in South Africa, and belongs to the snapdragon family, Scrophulariaceae, which includes thousands of species worldwide.

Above: Diminutive Nemesia barbatus, in Cape Town’s spring.

Nemesia flowers share the snapdragon trait of appearing to have tiny, muppet-like “mouths”—in Afrikaans, they are called leeubekkies (little lion mouths). Vexingly, at least for plant geeks, very similar-looking butter-and-eggs, a.k.a. toadflax (Linaria) are no longer their relatives; they have been reclassified, and have shifted into the Plantaginaceae family.

Above: A species nemesia in South Africa’s Northern Cape province.

It’s easy to disappear into a rabbit hole when trying to trace the hybridization and cultivar-creation of modern nemesias for the international nursery trade. For most of us, it’s enough to know that these sweet little plants offer airy and colorful interest early, and that the interest persists for months. While nemesias are very forgiving of cold temperatures (above freezing) they are also—increasingly—bred to survive wilting humidity.

Above: Nemesia hybrids at the Gowanus Nursery in Brooklyn in mid-April.

Above: Nurseries begin to stock nemesias in early spring.
Above: Part of their allure is the gradation of color in new and older flowers.
Above: Many nemesias are perfumed, their scent strongest in the evening.

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