donut_donut: (Default)
donut_donut ([personal profile] donut_donut) wrote in [community profile] little_details2025-05-19 02:49 pm

Plants for Garden in the French Pyrenees

Hi! I'm writing a novel that takes place in the French Pyrenees (modern day), and I'm trying to figure out what plants to place in this fictional garden.

More info:
The novel takes place at a villa owned by a middle-aged bohemian lady who moved there from Paris maybe a decade ago. Gardening is her hobby. In the back of the house is a potager (vegetable garden), and I've got that covered. But the front of the house has a flower garden, and I don't know so much about that.

It doesn't need to be plants that are native to the region, but it has to be plausible that they would be available and could thrive there. It's summertime (late July-August), and I would like there to be flowers, because we often see her pruning the old blooms. I assume rose bushes would work, but I would love some other options to work with. I've been picturing something like hydrangeas or rhodedendrons, but I don't know how common they are in this environment.

Some kind of ornamental tree would also be nice, for a character cry under. A flowering tree or large bush would be nice but not necessary.

She has somewhat offbeat tastes, so anything off the beaten track would be great, but it has to make sense for the climate.

Thank you!
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)

Re: Starting a new thread because the windows are shrinking.

[personal profile] full_metal_ox 2025-05-21 03:45 am (UTC)(link)
Which means that you’d have a more direct idea of her formative influences than I would.

Still endorsing the asphodel, though.
Edited 2025-05-21 03:46 (UTC)
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)

Re: Starting a new thread because the windows are shrinking.

[personal profile] full_metal_ox 2025-05-21 09:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Orchis italica is native to the Mediterranean (I’m seeing wildly varying accounts of what U.S. climate zone equivalent would support them, ranging from 5 to 10) and has culinary and medicinal uses.

This image of the blossoms is all over the web, but I’m going to credit Ana Retamaro by linking directly: https://www.anaretamero.com/Nature/Plants-ang-fungi/OrchidsOrqu%C3%ADdeas/i-fLDq79g

And here are the edible tubers: