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Herman, I sow my seeds on top of a mineral mix of Seramis, pumice and Zeolithe and cover the seeds with a layer of shredded and composted needle litter, about 1 cm. I can keep this moist and airy without being too wet. But sometimes it is overgrown by moss.
Gunilla, only the tiny ones are my seedlings. I bought the other two last spring in Japan.
Gabriela, the moss takes over the needle litter after a while. These seedlings were sown in 2018 and not yet picked out. I need to replant them soon.
Thank you Carsten. I've seen the same on various Hepatica pots showed from the Japan shows and I thought that people are adding the moss.I read about how you use the pine needle compost just on top of the sowing mix. It is interesting. It would be impossible here to have that kind of sowing mix with seramis, zeolithe....they are not available.I found that adding a healthy amount of perlite to any good soil mix produces good results with the exception that it can dry out too fast in the summer (we can have very hot summers).
Hepatica acutiloba and americana are hardy in our zone 3A garden. Our winters are brutal . Almost every year at least one week Saskatoon gets -35C . Still they survive.
Carsten, is this composted needle litter not too acid? I use needle litter to germinate Trillium undulatum.
Thank you for these great photos Carsten! The 4. flower from your 1. posting look‘s very beautiful. I like the dark antheres! The red colour from your Shinku seedlings is top!How big is your pot, and how many seeds give you inside?Kind regards,Patrick
Herman, I don't know about the ph level. It just works for me with Hepaticas and some other woodlanders.
Patrick, I use plastic pots 10 x10x x 9 from 'Sima'. I sow up to 50 seeds in one pot but some 20 might be better. Many pots are too crowded but the seedlings are easily splitted as of the mineral compost I use.
Pots from 2019 and 2018.