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This plant was perhaps the best find of the trip. I realised it was an Abrotanella but I did not recognise the species until one of my iNaturalist colleagues suggeste Abrotanella pusilla, a North Island species. There are two other records of it in the South Island one from Fiordland and the other from Arthurs Pass. It is a very striking plant with the dark bracts around the head.We found some Rubus parvus in flower This is a plant I would like to have in my garden. It would make a very attractive ground cover.
Thanks Thomas but no praise deserved ... only one seedling after several attempts, and is it really a celmisia I couldn't find photos online so hoped for an expert opinion here. Otherwise time will tell.
From my photos you might think that we are always blessed with magnificent views, fine weather and a endless variety of alpine plants in flower on our botanical excursions. However it is not always thus. We decided to go up a creek called Rough Creek off the main highway an the western side of the Lewis Pass It should have given us access to the open tops above Lake Christabel which drains west into the Blue Grey River. Rough Creek is aptly named; the track rises steeply levels of a bit and rises steeply again. By the time we reached bushline it was raining quite hard and there were no suitable sites to make camp and pitch a tent. So after a fairly arduous trip up the valley we turned round and walked back down again. Our camp site that night was at the DOC campground at Marble Hill right on the alpine fault. We speculated what would happen if the fault moved during the night. We concluded that if it did we would not be getting home in a hurry. Neither would a lot of other people. The next set of photos is taken on an Olympus TG5 camera which its manufacturers claim is waterproof down to 15 m.
Hello Ashley,I am no expert about Celmisia or any other native genus but I think it would be true to say that it can't be said that your seedling is NOT a celmisia. A also think that a lot of failures in the germination of celmisia seed are due to the seed not being viable in the first place. When collecting celmisia seed in the field - and even more in the garden - it is very noticeable that much of the seed is thin and often misshapen and sometimes hosting a small weevil-type insect who has dined on the fleshy part of the seed. (This perhaps less in cultivation than in the wild but pollination in the garden seems to be chancy anyway.)I learned many years ago in my seed sowing career that some seeds such as Fritillaria, Tulipa and Celmisia among quite a lot of others, will float or flutter from one's fingers, or drop quite slowly onto a piece of paper and these are not fertile while other, fertile seeds will drop quickly straight down and meet the paper with a small click sound. Of course you know this but less experienced collectors of seed sometimes don't. We have had collected seed from celmisias donated to the seedlists and know before listing it that it won't germinate but can only list it in hope, so I wonder if you and Thomas have not been successful with celmisia seed for this reason? My own bugbear has been seed of Clematis columbiana tenuiloba 'Ilva.' I've applied for it 4 times now. Once there was nothing in the packet at all! and twice, although I sowed it I knew nothing would germinate. This year however I have sown what looks to be good, fertile seed (from SRGC of course) and am hopeful of some seedlings in the spring. Like Thomas I am eagerly awaiting my seed allocation from NZAGS and hope the collectors of the natives on the list are experienced and observant.
Hello Ashley,I am no expert about Celmisia or any other native genus but I think it would be true to say that it can't be said that your seedling is NOT a celmisia. A also think that a lot of failures in the germination of celmisia seed are due to the seed not being viable in the first place.
... Yesterday I pricked 4 tiny seedlings of Leucogenes grandiceps and some of Raoulia hectori...what a pleasure.
Several times I've failed with celmisia seed from the exchanges. Is my luck changing (just)?
Thanks Dave. The tricky bit for us poor sods in the NH is getting hold of fresh seed Presumably celmisias aren't self-fertile.