Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Susann, I was thinking in terms of protecting a few buds in muslin bags then hand-pollinating them, to see what variability the seedlings might show.Oh, I see. Yes, it would work. I could take pollen from the first flowers that opens the pollen sacks and save it to pollinate the very last flowers to mature. It would, however, produce very few seeds as Pulsatillas do all they can to avoid self pollinating. They are very good in aborting seeds, and unfortunally they often abort the seeds of the last flowers to flower. (Pulsatillas does not open a flower's pollen sacks until the pistills have closed for germination to protect from self pollination)The seedlings will be 100% yellow flowering but the color of the hairs could be grey or white.I am sure the first flowers will produce pollen in the next coming days. I will save it and pollinate the last flower for you. Please, send me some kind of contact information to to.samsbox@gmail.com"Someone" mystically helped me correcting the snowy picture. I am quite sure I know who. Thank you!
Pulmonaria altaica is new to me. Is it evergreen or does it come from root in the spring? It looks really nice. Here Corydalis have joined Hellebores and Hepaticas. In the picture there is Corydalis solida x kuznetsovii 'Boyar' between Helleborus and Hepatica nobilis, it's colour is so dark it is difficult to photograph, but I think in this picture from yesterday it looks right how I see it.