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Robert, please beware of the marijuana growers. We need you and hope for moreinteresting pictures of your native plants in their natural habitats.Many thanks for everything!
(Attachment Link) One last photograph, a group of Dryopteris arguta growing in the shade of Bigleaf Maples, Acer macrophylla. Today, I came across 5 species of fern, the others were Adiantum jordanii, Pentagramma triangularis, Polypodium calirhiza, and Asidotis densa.
Possibly strains of A. jordanii from the upper elevation or northern geographic limits of its range may be more suited to temperate gardens but I doubt anyone has yet tested this idea.Ed
We grow Polypodium scouleri in the garden, which I read in Sue Olsen's superb book is a coastal species
Hi Ed, I would gladly test any fern here in my climate
I could wish I had the redwoods to go with it! Reading that I know see that we don't have those coastal fogs that P. scouleri really needs, even if it does grow in the garden moderately well. The higher altitude ferns that Robert shows are more likely to grow successfully, and certainly in pots as we have grown Cheilanthes.
Casa Flora (a wholesale producer in the US) has put Adiantum x tracyi into tissue culture: http://www.casaflora.com/plant/tracys-maidenhair/. So it should be readily available in the US, perhaps they could also export to Europe.