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We had very warm days so the tree peonys are almost over. P. suffructicosa 'Shimane chojuraku' is suffering from strong winds. It has become so top heavy that I will have to cut it down a bit...
Yes, little plant, big flower
Tree peony flowers are great, but I have given up on them (though I have one P.rockii which may be a plant to grow here, it has one flower one after this very mild winter)
Do you have P.mairei? That is probably the earliest peony to flower here (though mine are too young to flower yet), P.obovata and many others are already in bud and I think after one week or little more I will see the first peony flowers here.
Leena - Then you should try P. suffruticosa v. spontanea. Our seed came from Stefan Mattson in Enkoping, Sweden. It has sturdy stems and doesn't flop and ewas said to grow to circa 2.5m in Enkoping where Stefan used it extendisvely in the park system. True seed will throw white, pink and pale lavenders.There was mention of this peony in The Plantsman awhile back and believe it was a heritage plant in Finland and northern Norway.
Yes, I have a P. mairei, grown from seed (my sister is good in growing plants from seed ). P. mairei was in flower two weeks ago, after some frosty nights.
Leena - I must have confused it with the article on P. officianlis 'Nordic Paradox' in tyhat issue, Norway not Finland. I would try to find that artiocle on P. spontanea as it came from Gansu to Moscow to Scandinavia, where is the question. Surely it would be worth a try. How cold do you get, like Mustilla Arboretum?