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Lesley, enlighten me. johnw
The cushion celmisias should indeed like similar conditions as you describe Tim. If you have a good big specimen or find one in the wild, you can push your hand into it and find not a mass of brachlets - we'll they're there all right - but rather a mass (mess) of dying or dead fibre from previous years' growth. This is all brown and usually very wet, even wringing wet and the new growth sends its roots into it and so are never dried out. Even if the surface of the cushion is hot and dry (though bellidioides prefers a cool place), the underneath is always cool and moist. Other cushions such as Phyllacne, Donatia, Hectorella et al, grow the same way with similar results.