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The G. lutea flowering looks fantastic Herman. I am waiting patiently for few of my seedlings to reach flowering age. They are so difficult from seeds! but worth the wait, and I wouldn't find to buy it anyway.Here's my young one maybe 4, or 5 years. I made the mistake to move it two years ago and it took a step back.
Thank you Gabriela, it has taken many years to get flowering plants in the garden.Gabriela, they indeed don't like to be moved. G. lutea produces a lot of seeds that germinate well but it is a long way till flowering time. Many of the seedlings do not reach that flowering time, even after several years in the garden they can suddenly disappear. Once established they can live a long time, my oldest one is already 14 years in the garden.
Herman, your Kingfisher looks very promising, this plant must explode in some time.The true Gentiana paradoxa became rather rare in cultivation, most of the plants inthe nursery trade are hybrids.Thank you for showing.The Gentiana in the picture is the plant with the biggest flowers in my collection.It is a seedling of unknown parentage from Vladimir Kalous from Czech Republic.
Wonderful Gentiana Herman and Rudi.The Kingfisher size is surreal! and I like that stone ball Rudi: your Gentiana could be G. clusii, with a bit of late flowering than usual.My Gentiana paradoxa (which always starts flowering when G. septemfida ends).The first pictures: a mix of G. paradoxa and hybrids, grown from G. paradoxa seeds of garden origin. If given the chance there is always cross pollination. I planted the whole seedlings pot in one place and it would hard to separate them now.Then, Gentiana paradoxa grown from wild coll. seeds (the first flowering).
Gabriela, the leaves from your Gentiana paradoxa from wild seeds are indeed much narrower than those of the hybrid forms. But the hybrids are also beautiful.Kingfisher likes humid weather!
Gabriela and Herman, thank you for your always interesting photos and comments.The big flowered Gentiana always reminds me of the interesting meetings with Czechand other European rockgardeners in the autumn in Eastern Czech Republic.Vladimir Kalous always had an interesting amount of rare dwarf conifers in his carplus a lot of flowering gentians in all shades from white to dark blue but without any labels and I still regret,that i didn't buy more of them.