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At the beginning of the mountain biking season I am still slow enough to spot Hepaticas.
Hepatica acutiloba 'Louise Koehler'
I am amazed how wonderful and different Hepaticas grow in your region. Really beautiful.Here also Hepaticas are now flowering in early places. There has been snow some nights this week so all flowers have stopped to develop for a while, but it is good that Hepatica season doesn't go over very fast.Hepatica japonicas which I planted outside last year are starting to flower and so are H.pubescens, though there were some flowers already in the autumn, and so only a few flowers now. I dug up one H.nobilis and divided it, and it's root system was really large and went deep! I think it was about 25cm deep and as much to the sides, really a lot of fine roots. No wonder they can also grow in drier places when they have such a lot of roots.
We are not allowed in the woods and any other wild areas, for now.
We are not allowed in the woods and any other wild areas, for now. The flowering is only beginning and I hope things will change. So, only Hepaticas from the garden can be enjoyed. The rabbits got a taste of them this year unfortunately.H. acutiloba fo. rosea - the flowers were almost all eaten alreadyH. acutiloba, blue form, a rarity in my region where the majority are white, or pinkH. acutiloba white multipetal, the only such form I found to date
Gabriela, beautiful acutiloba's!
Thank goodness you have your own garden, it saves your spring. H.acutiloba is very nice, my seedlings don't flower yet this year, but hopefully next year. The multipetaled one is special. This picture is from yesteday, it is H.japonica 'Hakurin' growing in the garden. The brown in the middle of some of the flowers is maybe frost damage? Or from wet?Still, very cute little Hepatica.
Gabriela is it Corona or risk of Forest forest fires that stop you entering the forest?Here we can enjoy a long flowering time as it is cold and sunny.I have not been to the forest as it is a bit of distant where they grow and we are to avoid longer travels. I am happy that I got my hepaticas in the ground last autumn. Having also found some seedlings make me happy even if only one is flowering size.
I got seeds of white Hepatica, some years ago. I assumed they were H.nobilis (they were given to only as white Hepatica), but the person who gave me seeds, has different ones.I have been admiring this all April. Usually leaves of H.nobilis are tattered by spring, but with this plant, leaves are still in quite good condition (except some bug has eaten a bit of them). I can't make up my mind if this is H.nobilis or not..
Looks like nobilis Leena, nice and robust; it would be impossible to say if a hybrid. I also raised from seeds a nobilis form with leathery foliage.