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If the seed was pulsatilla-like then Lori's suggestion seems logical.
David - to me that leaf looks a lot more like Anemone multifida (magellanica), but if that's the case the seed would have been woolly and quite unlike pulsatilla seed. American botanists, it seems, don't recognise the genus pulsatilla and place the two American species into Anemone, which seems pretty confusing. Chris Grey-Wilson writes about how close these two genera are, and the quite distinct differences there are between them, in his book on Pasque flowers, and one of the most obvious is the feathery plumes on pulsatilla seed. If the seed was pulsatilla-like then Lori's suggestion seems logical.
Well Tim, there's that other well known gardeners' saying, "the more I know the more I realize I don't know" and if nothing else, I know beyond a doubt that THAT one is true for me. I also know that I've forgotten more than I currently know, which probably says more about the state of my ageing brain than of anything else.
Yuzawa grows their acid loving Pulsatillas in pure -I can only describe it as grit- that they get straigth from a vulcan, it is a quite corse grit. I am sure there are a lot of strange minerals in their grit that we dont know about and therefore can not copy.