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Paeonia x smouthii yesterday in the first picture, very similar is Paeonia x hybrida in the second. It is a naturally occuring cross between P.tenuifolia and P.anomala. The peony flowering with one flower behind it is P.mollis.
I have 5 or 6 plants of P. emodi in part shade and only one (the one in the sunnier spot) has several flowers this year. I am wondering whether to move the others to a sunnier place, or maybe just feed them? (I don't usually....)
The last peony is a one I have grown from my own open pollinated seeds of P.obovata ssp willmottiae, and obviously bees have been doing their work and I think this is cross with P.anomala which flowered at the same time and also it looks like intermediate between the two. I have five of these sister seedlings, all flowered already last year and are similar, and not one of them produced seeds so they are sterile hybrids. Flowers are big, about size of my palm.
That's fascinating, any chance you could show a picture of a leaf? Any fragrance? It looks an awful lot like P. mairei, which, coincidentally, is native to the area of China where obovata and anomala meet.
Early peonies go over so fast. They are wonderful though when in flower. Here is another picture of P.x smouthii, it already over now.The second picture is from my P.wittmanniana, or what I have gotten as such. It is not mlokosewitchii.It's flowers are very very nice pale yellow, but the colour doesn't show in pictures. Very vigorous and good peony, which also has seeds.The last peony is a one I have grown from my own open pollinated seeds of P.obovata ssp willmottiae, and obviously bees have been doing their work and I think this is cross with P.anomala which flowered at the same time and also it looks like intermediate between the two. I have five of these sister seedlings, all flowered already last year and are similar, and not one of them produced seeds so they are sterile hybrids. Flowers are big, about size of my palm.
Now that you mentioned it, the leaves do look like P.mairei. P.mairei is shorter plant, and flowers here two weeks before either P.obovata ssp willmottie or P.anomala. P.mairei is the first peony to flower here in spring.
You got me wanting to dig into seeing if there are any genetic studies on the relationship between the three, it's been too long since I looked at a peony paper.
Paeonia cambessedesii in the rock gardencheersfermi