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But its not; it is Myosotis retrosa. However that is a story for another time.
Very interesting, David. We had that topic back in... 2017... remember? In your article #194 on page 13 you identified this plant as M. glabrescens. It is still the same plant from back then...;-)
Apologies for coming late to this conversation. I haven't yet worked my way through all 45 pages but I noticed discussion of Aciphyllas and Celmisias. In our Scottish garden (Kerrachar) we had a really satisfying bed featuring these two genera but with Hebes, Mysosotidium etc as well and decided it would be good to try to reproduce this in Sheffield. It was fanatastically unchanging for most of the year and really was almost better without the flowers (especially the Aciphyllas !). Both genera are hardly available in British nurseries now - 25 years ago it was much easier to source plants. I assume the problem is the difficulty of raising them from seed. Last year I had almost complete failure. This year I have had very limited germinations and although all the eight species of Celmisia I sowed have produced at least one germination, none of them has developed a proper root structure (apart from Celmisia spectabilis ssp magnifica).Any advice on how to propagate either genera would be much appreciated. (My memory is that we bought in all the plants at Kerrachar -we had no success in raising them from seed there either.)
Clematis marmoraria -a young plant which has settled nicely into its crevice. It was past its best when I took this image.