I can give them well-drained sandy soil. But the winters here are very wet and mild (typically 5C) and cloudy. Will they survive outdoors?
Hello Gene
I agree with Steve’s advice. The well-drained sandy soil is certainly a good start for your wet climate. High summer temperatures may be more detrimental but I think the summers in Washington state are cool, which should be of benefit. A cover over winter will undoubtedly help and may give a better flowering performance but I do not provide any protection for my plants in the open garden.
In eastern Scotland, temperatures rarely get above 25 C in summer and annual precipitation is 70 cm.
One of my plants grows in a crevice bed with a sandy soil and gets very little sun in winter. It is 4 years old, grows slowly due to the poor substrate and has 3-4 flowers in the spring. Another plant on a raised bed is older but bigger and bears up to 8 flowers. This bed gets a lot of sun but is well drained.
I suggest trying plants in different locations in the garden but the optimum place would be a cool place with plenty of light. Sometimes it is a matter of trial and error to find out the ideal spot. Also, some clones may be more suitable for a particular environment. My plants are seed raised from a plant of the Scandinavian (Norwegian) form I got in 1998 (which is grown in the alpine house). These plants are more vigorous in cultivation, producing more flowers than those from mainland Europe.
I know of a garden, about 50 miles north of where I live (so cooler) where P. vernalis used to be easy to grow outside, but this is not the case now. There may well be pathogens that eventually get a hold in a particular environment, making life difficult.
Cyril