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Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 26 June, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett26 June, 2026

On holiday in Cumbria last week, we visited the magnificent sand dunes at Sandscale Haws. We didn’t see any of the Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, I wrote about in April but there were lots of other lovely plants, including masses of Burnet Rose, Rosa spinosissima, at the back of the dunes, Sea Rocket, Cakile maritima, on the beach and dune slacks full of orchids.

One of the highlights of our visit was a big patch of Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella. It was growing on a south facing slope a little way in from the edge of the dunes.

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, in the dunes at Sandscale Haws in Cumbria (17th June 2026).

Where the Sea Bindweed grows

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, is one of the delights of Britain’s coasts and one of my favourite plants. It has beautiful striped flowers, pink decorated with five narrower white bands. Its leaves are elegant, shiny and kidney-shaped and its stems sprawl over the ground.

Sea Bindweed often grows in scenic places too. As I write (with curtains closed to keep the sun out) we are experiencing record-breaking  June temperatures (38 degrees Celsius at the moment) but just looking at a photograph Sea Bindweed on a beach in the Isles of Scilly is making me feel much better.

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, on a beach on St. Agnes, Isles of Scilly (June 2010).

Sea Bindweed is a member of the Convolvulaceae (Bindweed family). The family includes the edible Sweet Potato, Ipomoea batatas, and the parasitic Dodder, Cuscuta epithymum, that I wrote about in July 2021.

Bindweeds, especially other species of Calystegia such as Hedge Bindweed (Calystegia sepium) and Large Bindweed (Calysegia silvatica), grow very rampantly and are hated by many gardeners because of their persistent roots and invasive growth habits (note 1). Field Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis, is another close relative and can also be persistent weed . All three species have very attractive flowers and those of Field Bindweed are delightfully perfumed and well worth a sniff! (note 2). [See “Relatives of Sea Bindweed” below for pictures of Field and Large Bindweed.]

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, is their more refined coastal cousin. It too has long roots and these can grow more than 70 cm under sand cover (note 3) but it prefers growing on sand dunes and above the strand-line on sand and shingle beaches, so is unlikely to be encountered as a “weed”. It is a trailing perennial herb, rather than a vigorous climber, and it gently grows across sand or amongst other vegetation. Its flowers are beautiful, and typical of our other species of Calystegia) tin having no noticeable scent.

Sea Bindweed is restricted to coastal sites in the British isles, though it is hardy to -10 to -15 degrees Celsius (hardiness rating H5). It needs to be tough to cope with salt, hot sunshine and drought conditions.

On Sea Bindweed’s current status, the 2020 BSBI Plant Atlas says: “The loss of sand dunes and increased recreational disturbance on those that remain have resulted in many losses of this species during the 20th century, particularly in southern and eastern England, although it seems to be relatively resistant to trampling. Its distribution since the 1990s appears to be stable, save for coastal areas in eastern Scotland, where there are very few recent records.”

Distribution map of Calystegia soldanella from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.

Calystegia soldanella is a native of the British Isles. It is scarce in Northern Scotland, although it can be found on Orkney. It is included in rare plant registers for several Vice-Counties.

It is a native coastal plant in many other temperate and sub-tropical parts of the world. The Plants of the World Online website gives the native range for Sea Bindweed as follows: Europe (but not Scandinavia), North Africa, the Middle East and Iran, the United States (western states but also Virginia), parts of South America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

The New Zealand Plant Conservation Network gives an account of the plant in New Zealand.

The BSBI website says it is “widely naturalized outside its native range” but Plants of the World Online doesn’t mention this.

The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) website suggests growing Calystegia soldanella in a gravel or coastal garden, in sunny conditions with very sharp drainage. It is “unlikely to become a garden weed“. It suggests that slugs and snails may be attracted to the plant. The EarthOne website has more growing tips. I don’t intend to try but I wonder whether Sea Bindweed would grow in the sandy soil on my allotment?

Sea Bindweed in pictures

Time for some more pictures.

The first one shows a flower bud just above two open flowers:

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella. Flower bud at top of photograph, above the flowers.

Plants flower from June to September, with a peak in June to July. After flowering, Sea Bindweed forms its seeds.

The seeds are comparatively heavy and tend to remain on the sand surface, where they can remain until winter storms wash them out to sea. When they looked at soil core samples the authors of a study in Tuscany (Italy), failed to find any seeds and concluded that the local spread of Sea Bindweed was by its extensive root system, leading to large clonal patches of plants (note 3).

For long distance dispersal, Sea Bindweed seeds are able to float for a long time with maintaining viability and up to 90% of the seeds can germinate after nine months of immersion in sea water. This may help to explain the plant’s global distribution.

Populations of Calystegia soldanella in Europe show a low level of genetic divergence, as do Korean populations. This lends support to the hypothesis that seeds can be spread for long distances by sea (note 4).

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella. Leaves and a seed pod. Holkham Dunes, Norfolk (July 2022).

Even when not in flower, Sea Bindweed’s shiny, kidney-shaped leaves are very distinctive.

Sea Bindweed and wildlife

Sea Bindweed flowers are insect pollinated.

The Native Wildflowers website says they are “mainly pollinated by hawkmoths.” I’ve never observed this but I don’t hang around in sand dunes at night.

The Plants for a Future website mentions pollination by bees and moths and butterflies.

I have a couple of photographs of bees visiting the flowers: a species of furrow bee (Lasioglossum or Halictus sp.) on a beach on St. Agnes in the Isles of Scilly in 2010 and, from last week, a species of bumblebee (Bombus sp.) at Sandscale Haws.

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, with visiting furrow bee (Lasioglossum or Halictus sp.). St. Agnes, Isles of Scilly (June 2010).

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, with visiting bumblebee at Sandscale Haws (June 2026).

Plant Associations

The BSBI Plant Atlas notes that Sea Bindweed often grows with Sea Holly, Eryngium maritimum – as in this photograph from Sandscale Haws:

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, with Sea Holly, Eryngium maritimum. Sandscale Haws, Cumbria (June 2026).

On a visit to Winterton Dunes, Norfolk Flora Group found Sea Bindweed scrambling amongst the abundant Marram Grass Ammophila arenaria.

At Sandscale Haws, Sea Bindweed was also growing with Common Restharrow, Ononis repens. Both plants had pink flowers but the flower shapes and shades of pink made a pleasing contrast.

Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella, with Common Restharrow, Ononis repens. In the dunes at Sandscale Haws in Cumbria (June 2026).

Other names for Calystegia soldanella

Other English names for Calystegia soldanella include: Scotch Scurvy Grass, Sea Bells, Seashore False Bindweed, Shore Bindweed, Shore Convolvulus and Beach Morning Glory.

A more romantic name is “The Prince’s Flower”.  On 23 July 1745, Bonnie Prince Charlie (Charles Edward Stuart) landed on the island of Eriskay in the Outer Hebrides, with seven companions (known as the the Seven Men of Moidart). The beach where he landed is now known as Coilleag a’ Phrionnsa (“The Prince’s Strand).

The story goes that seeds of Sea Bindweed fell out of his pocket when he took out his handkerchief and the plant took root.

Whether or not this is true, Sea Bindweed still grows on that beach today.

Sea Bindweed as food

Sea Bindweed has been used for food.

In New Zealand “Maori gathered the thick, white, fleshy roots and pounded these to form a pulp, this was then used as a relish to flavour some meats.”

The Plants for a Future website says that young shoots can be cooked as a vegetable or pickled and used as a samphire substitute. However, it advises caution because the plant “might have a purgative effect”.

The Plants for a Future website also lists some possible medical uses for the plant.

I think I’ll stick to admiring its flowers.

Further Reading

See the Botany In Scotland blog for an interesting description of Calystegia soldanella and this and the Wild Flower Finder website for more photographs.

Mike Crewe’s Flora of East Anglia website has a useful page comparing different bindweeds.

Relatives of Sea Bindweed

Large Bindweed, Calystegia silvatica

Large Bindweed, Calystegia silvatica, has short, wide bracteoles which overlap where they meet, hiding the sepals. On our allotment site (June 2025). The sepals are visible in its close relative, Hedge Bindweed, Calystegia sepium.

Field Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis

Field Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis. On a road verge in Suffolk (June 2025). Although this plant was low and spreading, the flowers and leaves were very different to those of Sea Bindweed. (The leaf just left of centre belongs to a Common Mallow plant.)

Notes

Note 1 – When they are in flower you can tell apart Hedge Bindweed (Calystegia sepium) and Large Bindweed (Calysegia silvatica) by looking at their bracteoles, the green leaf-like stuctures at the base of the flower. Large Bindweed has short, wider bracteoles which overlap where they meet. Hedge Bindweed has narrower, longer bracteoles with a gap between them, allowing a glimpse of the sepals.

Note 2 – We have lots of Field Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis, on our allotment. I tolerate it at the edges of the plot but remove shoots that emerge in vegetable beds. Most of the roots are unharmed when I do this but I prevent the plant from outcompeting or enveloping other plants.

When we took on our allotments over 25 years ago we double dug each plot to remove roots of perennial weeds and found Field Bindweed roots in the subsoil more than two spade depths down. Since then, our aim has been to control the plant rather than eliminate it.

I didn’t realise Field Bindweed had scented flowers until about ten years ago when Vanna invited me to sniff some when we were at Warham Camp in North Norfolk. I had sniffed Large Bindweed flowers as a child and had assumed that Field Bindweed had no scent either, but I was wrong.

Note 3 – Di Sacco A and Bedini G (2015). Demography and reproductive performance of Calystegia soldanella on a sandy seashore in Tuscany, Italy. Botany Vol. 93, pp100-108.

Note 4 – R. Arafeh,”Molecular phylogeography of the European coastal plants Crithmum maritimum L., Halimione portulacoides (L.) Aellen, Salsola kali L. and Calystegia soldanella (L.) R. Br.” The paper has information about seed viability after immersion in sea water and its long roots are shown in figure 2.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged bindweed, Calystegia, Calystegia sepium, Calystegia silvatica, Calystegia soldanella, Convolvulaceae, Convolvulus arvensis, Sea Bindweed

Heath Navel, Lichenomphalia ericetorum

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 19 May, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett20 May, 2026

On Sunday three three of us visited Holt Lowes in North Norfolk. It was very dry and fungi were rather scarce, so we spent most of the time looking at plants. But on a low peaty bank at the edge of the valley mire we found some small, slightly dried out fungal fruitbodies and I brought a couple home to identify.

Lichenomphalia ericetorum

Heath Navel, Lichenomphalia ericetorum. Holt Lowes, Norfolk, 17th May 2026. (The Bracken stem at the top of the photograph is infected with the extremely common Bracken Map fungus, Rhopographus filicinus.)

Lichenomphalia ericetorum

I looked in Volume 2 of Geoffrey Kibby’s “Mushrooms and Toadstools of Britain and Europe” for a possible match and found Lichenomphalia umbellifera.

The species is known as Lichenomphalia ericetorum in The Fungal Database of Britain and Ireland (FRDBI). (Other synonums include Omphalina ericetorum and Botrydina vulgaris.) The species was first described by Linnaeus in 1753 as Agaricus umbelliferus.

The fungus had white spores and decurrent gills. These were widely spaced and sometimes forked and formed veins linking adjacent gills.. When fresh the gills are pale yellowish but in my samples they had dried a darker yellow-orange.  The stipe attached to the centre of the cap and was reddish-brown at the tip. (This colour continued into the lower part of the gills in my specimens.) The base of the stipe was slightly enlarged and covered with a pale fuzz.

Lichenomphalia ericetorum

Lichenomphalia ericetorum – two picked fruitbodies.

Lichenomphalia ericetorum spores look like this:

Spores of Lichenomphalia ericetorum.

Spores of Lichenomphalia ericetorum (x1000, in Meltzer’s reagent, which colours them yellow).

So far, so normal.

But I found a 2023 blog post by Sim Elliott and the story became much more interesting.

Lichenomphalia ericetorum: Not Just a Fungus, but a Basidiolichen

At first glance, Lichenomphalia ericetorum appears to be a normal basidiomycete fungus but the fruitbody is actually part of a lichen, an association between a fungus and an alga (note 1).

Lichen fungi have evolved independently several times.

Most fungi found in lichens (98%) are ascomycetes (sac or cup fungi) and these give most of the familiar and easily recognised growth forms: a thallus consisting of a colourful crust, a rosette or a leafy (foliose) or shrubby (fruticose) structure.

A much smaller number of lichens have a basidiomycete fungus as the fungal partner. What we see in Lichenomphalia ericetorum is the fungal fruitbody of one of these basidiolichens.

If you look closely at the base of the Lichenomphalia ericetorum you will see a mass of green blobs. These are green algae in the genus Coccomyxa and are the photosynthetic partner (the photobiont).

The green blobs at the base of the stem are a green alga (Coccomyxa sp.).

The green blobs at the base of the stem are a green alga (Coccomyxa sp.). They are the photosynthetic partner in the lichen (the photobiont).

Seen under the microscope:

Coccomyxa sp. algae under the microscope.

Coccomyxa sp. algae under the microscope (x100).

Two alternative English names for Lichenomphalia ericetorum, Lichen Agaric and Pea-green Mushroom Lichen, describe its true status as a basidiolichen.

Distribution of Lichenomphalia ericetorum

In Norfolk Lichenomphalia ericetorum had been recorded 30 times from 24 different sites up to the end of 2025.

In the British Isles as a whole there are currently 492 records of Lichenomphalia ericetorum, with a northern bias.

Distribution map for Lichenomphalia ericetorum (FRDBI)

Distribution map for Lichenomphalia ericetorum from The British Mycological Society Fungal Records Database of Britain and Ireland. [Accessed on 17th May 2026]

The British Lichen Society website also has a map of the distribution of Lichenomphalia ericetorum but at the time of writing this has no records for Norfolk. (Norfolk records are also missing from my copy of “Lichens” by Frank Dobson (note 2).)

Outside the British Isles, Lichenomphalia ericetorumis found in the northern hemisphere, particularly in the region of the Arctic. It is common in the  Pacific Northwest of Canada and the United States, northward from Santa Cruz in California.

Lichenomphalia ericetorum in Scotland

I remembered seeing some similar fungi a couple of years ago, when Vanna and I were walking the Ryvoan Pass in the Scottish Highlands (note 3).

I found the photos. The Scottish examples were in much better condition than the ones from Norfolk.

At first glance the fungi seemed to be growing in mosses:

Lichenomphalia ericetorum

Heath Navel, Lichenomphalia ericetorum. Abernethy Forest, 24th June 2024.

But when I looked closely at a second photo it was possible to see the green blobs of Coccomyxa algae more clearly. I’ve cropped the photo to make these easier to see:

Lichenomphalia ericetorum

Heath Navel, Lichenomphalia ericetorum. Abernethy Forest, 24th June 2024. Here it’s possible to see the green blobs of Coccomyxa algae at the bottom right of the photograph.

I recommend a read of Sim Elliott’s “A lichen that fruits like a mushroom. Lichenomphalia umbellifera at Eridge Rocks. 30.07.23“, which has some good photographs too (from Sussex). The pictures of Lichenomphalia ericetorum on the Lichens Maritimes website (from France and Belgium) are worth a look too.

Notes

Note 1 – Lichens are made up of two or more closely interacting organisms, a fungus, and one or more photosynthetic partners (photobionts).

The lichen symbiosis is thought to be a mutualistic relationship, in which both the fungus and its photobionts benefit. The fungus forms the main structure of the lichen (known as the thallus), which provides a home for the photobionts. These produce simple sugars by photosynthesis, which are used as food by the fungi.

90% of lichen photobionts are green algae and the remainder are cyanobacteria.

98% of lichen fungi are ascomycetes (sac or cup fungi). It is thought that one fifth of all known fungi and half of all ascomycetes are lichenised, with about 28,000 species worldwide.

Note 2 – “Lichens: An Illustrated Guide to the British and Irish Species” by Frank S. Dobson. 7th edition (2018, reprinted 2023). The British Lichen Society, London.

Note 3 – The Ryvoan Pass is a lovely 10 mile walk from Glenmore Lodge to Nethy Bridge in the Scottish Highlands. We were staying in a holiday cottage in Nethy Bridge in June 2024 and took a bus to Aviemore and another to Glenmore Lodge. We had bought return tickets but it was such a lovely summer day that we decided to walk the whole route back to Nethy Bridge.

We passed the beautiful An Lochan Uaine (green lochan), headed uphill to the Ryvoan Bothy and through Abernethy Forest. Here we saw Bog Beacon and Twinflower but – sadly or fortunately – didn’t encounter any rogue Capercaillies.

Warning sign: Rogue Capercaillie

Warning sign: Rogue Capercaillie.

An Lochan Uaine

An Lochan Uaine (green lochan), passed on the Pass of Ryvoan walk. The lovely green colour of the water is allegedly caused by fairies washing their clothes at night.

Posted in Fungi | Tagged Coccomyxa, green algae, Heath Navel, lichen, Lichen Agaric, Lichenomphalia ericetorum, Lichenomphalia umbellifera, Pea-green Mushroom Lichen

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 28 April, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett28 April, 2026

Drama and beauty amongst the shingle

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, is starting to flower on the south coast of England and will continue throughout late spring and early summer around our coasts.

When it grows in quantity Sea-kale can dominate the shorescape. In Flora Britannica, Richard Mabey describes the appearance of Sea-kale plants from a distance as “like enormous sea-urchins, or a rounded desert cactus that has taken to the shingle” and, closer to, having “something of the character of outsize cauliflowers” (note 1).

Like Sea Pea, Sea-kale is abundant at Shingle Street in Suffolk, and adds drama to a visit to this special place.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima. Shingle Street, Suffolk. May 2023.

I also associate Sea-kale with seaside holidays to the Isle of Portland in Dorset, Rye Harbour in East Sussex and Dungeness in Kent.

Sea-kale, crambe maritima. Isle of Portland, June 2023.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima. Isle of Portland, June 2023.

Derek Jarman's cottage, Dungeness, with Sea-kale, Crambe maritima. September 2010.

Prospect Cottage, Dungeness (Derek Jarman’s home from 1987 to 1994), with Sea-kale, Crambe maritima. September 2010.

Where to find Sea-kale

Sea-kale (or sometimes ‘Sea Kale”), Crambe maritima, is a tough plant of shingle and boulder beaches and occasionally sea cliffs and is found around suitable coasts in the British Isles, where it is a native plant. It is a halophyte (it is tolerant to salt) and has a long, fleshy tap-root to provide anchorage and reach scarce water supplies.

Sea-kale has declined in some parts of its range where sea-defence works have destroyed its shingle habitats. Violent winter storms can destroy plants and the use of bulldozers to rebuild shingle banks can cause damage too and perhaps for this reason, the plant is less common in North Norfolk than on some other coasts.

However, given the chance, Sea-kale can recover from buried root fragments or seed even when established plants are damaged and the BSBI Plant Atlas 2020 gives its overall distribution as either stable or increasing. Sea-kale has increased in Ireland since the 1960s and several sites have been found along the Antrim coastline, where the plant had not been recorded for over 200 years.

Distribution map of Crambe maritima from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020

Distribution map of Crambe maritima from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.

Further afield, Crambe maritima is native in many other European countries, north to Scandinavia and east to the Caucasus, Ukraine and parts of Russia and Turkey. It has been introduced into Czechia and Slovakia, and the state of Oregon in the United States.

In North Norfolk, Sea-kale seed was sown on Blakeney Point in 1912, resulting in a single plant which survived until the 1953 storm surge destroyed it. Plants re-appeared on the Point in 1968 and several plants persisted (note 2). I photographed some of them in 2009.

Sea-kale on Blakeney Point. October 2009.

Sea-kale on Blakeney Point, North Norfolk. October 2009.

The plants present in 2009 were destroyed by northerly gales and huge shingle movements in 2010 but Sea-kale plants reappeared on the shingle within 10 years and in 2025 there were 26 plants in total. It’s possible that movements of Land Rovers or tractors helped to distribute their seeds or roots, as all these plants were close to vehicle tracks (note 3).

A year in the life of Sea-kale

Crambe maritima is a perennial plant. It dies back in winter back into its fleshy taproot and the new shoots that emerge through the shingle in the spring are often tinged purple but become blue-green as the leaves expand.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, at Rye Harbour, East Sussex.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, at Rye Harbour, East Sussex. Late April 2013.

The plants produce sprays of flowers from mid spring onwards, pale cream in bud and white when fully open. Each flower has four petals arranged in the shape of a cross, typical of the Brassicaceae (Cabbage family), and the reason for the older name for this family of plants, the Cruciferae. The flowers are deliciously honey-scented and attractive to humans and insects alike.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima.

Close up of Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, flowers.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, at Shingle Street, Suffolk.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima (with Sea Campion, Silene maritima). Shingle Street, Suffolk. May 2023.

Seed-heads form after flowering and remain well into the autumn and early winter, until flattened or removed by storms.

Crambe maritima seeds are egg- (or pea) shaped and float on water, so can be spread to new locations on the tide. (See the Wild Flower Finder website for close up pictures of the seeds and for other superb photographs of the plant.)

Young plants can take at least five years to produce flowers.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima.

Sea-kale, Crambe maritima. Rye Harbour, September 2010.

Eating Sea-kale

Sea-kale is an edible plant. The older leaves are rather bitter and not very pleasant but the young leaves have a “pleasant almost nutty flavour” and can be eaten raw or cooked. The best flavoured shoots are those that have been blanched (covered to exclude the light). This can happen naturally where shoots have been covered by shingle but locals would sometimes cover young shoots with seaweed or sand. The young flowering shoots can be steamed in the same way as sprouting broccoli. The root is edible too, according to the Plants For A Future website. Galloway Wild Foods suggests dipping young shoots in Wild Garlic pesto, which sounds delicious.

The Galloway Wild Foods website offers very sound advice, a collector’s code for anyone picking Sea-kale in the wild. Please do follow it if you wish to pick the plant.

“Uprooting of sea kale seems like a very poor prize at a high cost, and should not be done. Individual plants, or isolated groups of just a handful of plants should be left alone. Young purple shoots and florets can be sustainably harvested from healthy colonies by removing just one or two from mature plants, then moving on.

Flowers and seed pods should be harvested with similar restraint, being sensitive to the relative abundance of the plants. If in doubt,  consider observing the colony for a few seasons, so you gain an understanding of how it is doing. As always, thinning abundance should be a responsible forager’s mantra!”

If in doubt, don’t pick!

As an edible plant, Sea-kale has gone through periods of fashion. In the late 18th century the plant was highly prized by London society and fresh shoots and even roots and seeds were sold at Covent Garden in London. At the end of the nineteenth century whole cartloads of plants were being collected on the Isle of Man (note 1). Simon Harrap has suggested that this over-harvesting contributed to a massive decline of the plant in Norfolk by the mid nineteenth century (note 2).

Growing Sea-kale

I have never harvested Sea-kale from the wild, but I have grown it on my allotment and in doing this I inadvertently followed the example of the great naturalist Gilbert White, who gathered seed in Devon in August 1750 and sowed it in his garden at Selborne in Hampshire the following April (note 1).

I covered my single fairly small plant with a bucket in early spring to exclude light from the shoots and it provided us with small crops of blanched shoots for a couple of years. I think it was worth growing and we liked the gentle slightly nutty flavour of the blanched shoots.

Sea-kale plants are often long-lived but my plant died after a couple of years, perhaps after being weakened by club root, which is a problem on our allotment site. But I might have another go at growing this useful drought-tolerant plant.

Crambe maritima will grow in full sun or partial shade in fertile, very well-drained soil, with enough space to let the plant spread and enough depth to accommodate the long tap root. It is very hardy and will survive our coldest winters.

Sea-kale is not suitable for growing in shallow containers, but the Hartley Botanic website suggests using tubs, which can be brought indoors to provide early shoots. (They’d have to be large tubs and you’d need lots of space. Alternatively, small, deep pots may work.)

The Gardenersworld.com, Hartley Botanic and Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) websites offer advice on growing Sea-kale. Plants or pieces of root (“thongs”) can be bought online and Emorsgate Seeds supplies seeds.

A 2014 article in The Independent newspaper gives an account of Sea-kale being grown commercially in Britain.

Other species of Crambe

As well as Sea-kale, Crambe maritima, two other species of Crambe can be found growing wild in the British Isles.

Greater Sea-kale, Crambe cordifolia, is an even more spectacular perennial plant. From its mound of long-stalked, puckered, bristly dark-green leaves it produces a frothy mass of sweetly scented white flowers on long stems. It makes a spectacular plant for the back of a garden border. It is occasionally found as a garden throwout, where its roots persist but it rarely seeds. I planted it in Grapes Hill Community Garden in Norwich, where it was stunning for the first year – and then Garden Snails destroyed it.

Abyssinian Kale, Crambe hispanica, is sometimes grown as a spring-sown oil-seed crop (as subspecies abyssinica).  It occasionally escapes onto waste ground, road verges and riverbanks. It was first noticed in the wild in 2003 (Berwickshire) and in Ireland in 2008 (County Tyrone) and is increasing. I haven’t seen it yet.

Notes

Note 1 – Richard Mabey, pp 155 – 157, “Flora Britannica”. Sinclair-Stevenson, 1996.

Note 2 – Simon Harrap, p31, “Flowers of the Norfolk Coast”. Norfolk Nature Guides, 2008.

Note 3 – Richard Porter, “The plants of Blakeney Point: recent changes in status”. In Transactions of the Norfolk & Norwich Naturalists’ Society volume 58, part 1 (2025).

Posted in Edible, Ornamental | Tagged Crambe maritima, Sea-kale

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Thirty latest posts

  • Sea Bindweed, Calystegia soldanella 26 June, 2026
  • Heath Navel, Lichenomphalia ericetorum 19 May, 2026
  • Sea-kale, Crambe maritima 28 April, 2026
  • Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa 29 March, 2026
  • Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus 27 February, 2026
  • Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule 10 January, 2026
  • Zythia resinae (aka Sarea resinae) 30 December, 2025
  • Golden Conecap, Conocybe aurea 20 November, 2025
  • Five Fungi from Sweet Briar Marshes 23 October, 2025
  • Steccherinum oreophilum (aka Irpex oreophilus) – new for Norfolk 27 September, 2025
  • Orpine, Hylotelephium telephium 29 August, 2025
  • Wild Marjoram, Origanum vulgare 19 July, 2025
  • Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus 5 June, 2025
  • Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus 28 May, 2025
  • American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus 21 April, 2025
  • Cedar Cup, Geopora sumneriana 16 March, 2025
  • Cinnamon Bracket, Hapalopilus nidulans 13 February, 2025
  • Common Ragwort, Jacobaea vulgaris 13 January, 2025
  • Holly, Ilex aquifolium 7 December, 2024
  • Yellow Bird’s-nest, Hypopitys monotropa 24 November, 2024
  • Whiskery Milkcap, Lactarius mairei 8 November, 2024
  • Shaggy Bracket, Inonotus hispidus 25 September, 2024
  • Small Teasel, Dipsacus pilosus 24 August, 2024
  • Rothole Inkcap, Coprinopsis alnivora 1 August, 2024
  • Twinflower, Linnaea borealis 20 July, 2024
  • Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea 10 June, 2024
  • Beaked Hawk’s-beard, Crepis vesicaria 15 May, 2024
  • Thrift, Armeria maritima 17 April, 2024
  • Japanese Kerria, Kerria japonica 29 March, 2024
  • Golden Bootleg, Phaeolepiota aurea 12 March, 2024


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