

Angel's Trumpet plants (or Brugmansia) have flowers that point down. There really are both Angel's Trumpet and Devil's Trumpet plants and one of the ways to tell the difference is by the direction the flowers are pointing. But there are others that are sort of going out horizontally (not really up or down) and some that point down a little. In the photo above, the flowers are pointing up. I can't really decide if the flowers are pointing up or down. The plant is about 2 1/2 feet tall, has long, dark green leaves, burgundy-purple stems, and long white flowers with purple inside.Īnd, the plant is making lots of spiky, seed pods. My photos here are of the Angel's Trumpet or Devil's Trumpet (I haven't yet completely decided for sure which it is) growing smack dab in the middle of a path in my veggie garden today. So, I left it alone - after all, I've learned that if you aren't sure what a plant is, leave it alone until you do or you'll pull out something that you were sure you couldn't live without last year, but completely forgot you had planted. until something sprouted in our vegetable garden this summer and I had a feeling, or a slight tinge of a memory (was it the smell?) that this "weed" was an Angel's Trumpet Flower, or some close relative. I had just about completely forgotten that Angel's Trumpet Flowers existed. I didn't want to touch it or brush against it for fear of the smell. I don't know what it was about it, but I found the smell of it to be rather disgusting. And, although the flowers smelled nice, the plant itself (the leaves and stem) absolutely stunk. I think just about everything on Angel's Trumpet plants is poisonous (flowers, leaves, seeds, everything!), so I was always a bit worried about that. Honestly, I wasn't THAT disappointed about it. I blamed the shade and never thought of trying another one. It only got to be a few feet tall, flowered a little, but nothing to write home about, and eventually died back and was finally put to rest in the compost pile. I had very high hopes for it, but, like so many other sun loving plants, it ended up being a disappointment in my shady garden. I was sure it would be a hummingbird mecca in my yard and I was sure that I needed one, and QUICK. I had been enticed by the stunning photos in a gardening catalog of a beautiful, HUGE Angel's Trumpet plant - an almost bush or tree-like plant with what looked like hundreds upon hundreds of long, pastel flowers showering down from it. And, on what was truly a whim (I mean, if I'd really thought it through completely, I would have known it could never grow well (or really at all) in such shade as was my yard!) I bought an Angel's Trumpet Flower, planted it in a pretty pot and put it on our back patio for the summer. When I had a shady, forest-like garden in Northern Virginia, I dreamed of having some of the exotic flowers that thrived in warm, sunny spots growing in my gardens.
