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A friend told me about a place which is going to be destroyed soon and where Hepaticas grow.I went to look and found some different kinds (but no doubles unfortunately), and because they were going to be killed anyway, took them.This first one is maiden, am I right? It is very pretty.Then there were two which had almost like bicolour flowers, but what are the dark spots?I hope they are not because of virus or something like that, does anyone know?
Kris, your Hepatica's are flowering very well! I believe 6.Hepatica transsilvanica "Schwanenss" must be Hepatica transsilvanica 'Schwanensee'
Should the seeds be sown between the plants or sown in pots.
Thanks for the input Leena I thought more of winter damage than virus when I saw your photos but I am not an expert.I have had Hepaticas in pots and they had seeds and I found their seedlings a few weeks ago and transplanted them to where I have the others so during certain conditions there might be smaller plants here.I did put protection around all the seed heads by using the elastic self adhesive bandage that they wrap around you after donating blood. It is water permeable an took 1 minute to put around the seeds. Time will tell if it was ant proof or if the seeds would fall out some how.Leena is the plants coming fairly true to colour or do you mostly get blue? Interesting to here more input on this.I might plant some in place, give away some and place some in pots hoping that there might be some that will generate plants.Hope all of you get good seed set
Thank you for the advice Gabriela and Herman. I have the plants in pots, how far away from other Hepaticas do you think I have to keep the pots? When the new leaves emerge I will see if they are normal, the old leaves are very tattered, like in all H.nobilis here.Kris, very beautiful Hepaticas, your white H.transsilvanica is huge!Gabriela, so pretty pastel shades. I got one H.americana seedling from your seeds which was just the same powdery blue with white in the center of flower, I liked it very much, but unfortunately I had planted it in quite shady place and flowers opened full only when sun hit that spot and I always missed that moment when I was out with camera.Here are two more ordinary H.nobilis, blue and pink in the garden last week.
I remove the leaves since most of them are dead in spring.Gabriela your seedlings of the Hepatica acutiloba and Americana are in the second year .It may take another 2years to flower. The growing time in Saskatoon is very short.I love your Hepaticas. I have some H.acutiloba and one H.americana which I purchased are just forming buds now. But somehow they don't thrive like the H.nobilis.
Just a few H. acutiloba from the wild taken a few days ago, the flowering was almost done but the new new foliage is also very attractive. I actually went looking at H. americana in the last days. When temp. start rising here in the spring it is amazing how fast the wildflowers bloom.This one was actually very fragrant and it was windy so I 'made' a bouquet (Attachment Link) Solitary bees can sometimes feed on nectar.
Very pretty, Gabriela!Anyone knows if the seeds of the nobilis are viable please?