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Hi Mark,As with many other Raoulias there is some variation in the foliage colour. I looked through my image library and found the following picture not particularly golden but tending that way.
It looks like you had a good day. I am surprised Hilda is letting you out of the house at the moment after some of your more recent escapades.I used to think the Chionohebes at the base of the tors (similar to the one you have posted) were Chionohebe glabra until I found the real one growing on very wet sites in snowbank areas. It sort of keys out to Chionohebe pulvinaris which has been recorded from Otago, but it does not make a lot of sense since Chionohebe pulvinaris has a more northern distribution. The question I would pose and I don't think there is an answer to it yet is "Are these plants more similar genetically to Chionohebe thomsonii which you will find growing on the exposed cushion field a few metres away or to Chionohebe pulvinaris which is found predominantly in the northern part of the South Island"
hmm, although it's over 30 years ago I don't think it's that.The leaves had a sharp point. Rather than being woolly they had the same sort of silk / satin finish I remember Leucogenes leontopodium has.
ok, I think I've found it..it look like this one, labelled Raoulia hectori var mollishttps://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datei:Raoulia_hectori_var_mollis_1.JPG
I used to get seed from the New Zealand alpine garden society - don't they do that any more?