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Rose & Symphytum look lovely together, Cohan!In my garden, the asters are now mercifully covering the gaps left by the drought. Most of them are seedlings, but the red one on the left is A. n.-b. ´Royal Ruby´.
What glorious autumn colours Maggi There don't seem to be any carnivorous threads so I'll post this here. Heliamphora heterodoxa x ionasii is flowering here for the first time, since early July. Not having a tuning fork to hand I tried cutting off some of the enclosed, tube-like anthers then halving them & dusting the cut ends on the briefly-receptive stigma of a later flower. At least one ovary is swelling now but it remains to be seen whether any viable seeds result.
...............Trond-- is that Begonia outdoors all year there? I know there are a couple of quite hardy ones..................
.............There don't seem to be any carnivorous threads so I'll post this here. Heliamphora heterodoxa x ionasii is flowering here for the first time, since early July. Not having a tuning fork to hand I tried cutting off some of the enclosed, tube-like anthers then halving them & dusting the cut ends on the briefly-receptive stigma of a later flower. At least one ovary is swelling now but it remains to be seen whether any viable seeds result.
Brilliant fall colors everywhere: in public parks, in the garden and of course in the woods ..................
.................Trond, I remember your fine photos of heliamphoras in habitat with carnivorous bromeliads (Brocchinia/Catopsis?), a showy pink/red Utricularia & many other plants new to me. The tepuis must be wonderful to visit with their unique or even endemic biota, like islands scattered across an ocean of forest/savannah.
Trond and Ashley and Leena - the maples are the ones responsible for the brilliance, mainly A. rubrum, A. saccharum and A. x freemanii and their cultivars, usually selected for smaller, compact growth and reliable fall coloration.................