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Hepatica nobilis is still in flower in the mountains. And what a find!
Carsten, you have such a great gene pool in Hepaticas in the mountains, and a good eye to spot them:).Here it has been cloudy and cold, the first picture is from earlier.It is H.transsilvanica or H. x media (what is the difference in them?). I got it as H.crenatiloba, but it is not that. I posted a picture of this plant last year as H.crenatiloba, but later when the new leaves came, found out that it is not it. Very nice plant still.In the second picture these are H.japonica I have grown from seeds, the maiden form is nice.Third is bicolour H.nobilis (not so good picture because of the weather)And in the last one H.japonica 'Shirayuki', still flowering so well:).
Leena, the question what is the difference between transsilvanica and x media is very interesting. Maybe we can discuss it here. I found a picture from Jürgen Peters about leaves.- At the moment I would say transsilvanica has creeping rhizomes and x media not.- H. x media is generally sterile and is more clumping like nobilis.- The shape of the leaves (incisions) is more transsilvanica but the leaves are more leathery as nobilis. Total leave from H. x media is more rounded than transsilvanica.- Flowers larger than nobilis.So now I am waiting for other answers.
Beautiful hepaticas Leena and Gabriela. More hepaticas have started flowering. The native ones are still in bud. Some pictures from the gardenHepatica nobilis albaHepatica nobilis pinkHepatica nobilis rubra plenaHepatica nobilis var. pyrenaicaHepatica nobilis var. pyrenaica
And one of the most interesting find of this spring: a plant with large, multi-white flowers which have a blue eye when opening.The foliage falls in between americana and acutiloba, like it happened in other occasions, leading more and more to the belief of hybrids between the 2 species.But I await to see the new foliage, maybe it is more distinct.
Interesting to see the picture. Was it mainly in an area with H. americana that you found this plant? I've heard that the two species aren't often found together, but have heard examples of populations being as close as 500 meters or so, which would not be an impossible distance for insect travel.