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Just to prove we can get a Hepatica to flower outdoors in Bury. It's not quite up to the standard of our Sewell Medal winning 6 pan. Maybe next year. Sorry to boast Re medal but we've not much to boast about.
Shelagh, your potted Hepaticas are amazingly floriferous!!Here it is still snowy, but temperatures are rising so I hope to see snowdrops in couple of weeks.In the earliest spot they are peaking through snow. Last week one night there were northern lights even in the south of Finland.My husband took these pictures of them.
Leena,Thank you for sharing your husband’s photographs of the Northern Lights. The Northern Lights can be so very beautiful. The number of stars in the night sky amazed me. Only on a very clear night at the highest elevations of the Sierra Nevada Mountains can we see so many stars. It appears that spring will be arriving soon in your part of Finland. Locally, in the highest regions of the Sierra Nevada Mountains there is currently 16.7 feet (509 cm) of snow on the ground. Spring will not be arriving to these regions until late June or early July.
And I see your first snowdrops Here there are more and more, and after heavy rains yesterday I also spotted the first Eranthis, plus a Helleborus bud on a specimen uphill. Spring is definitely getting closer.
Always fascinates me when I see plants in snow with a diameter of melted snow, not sure why this happens.
Another Forumist grew Nemophila and other annual species native to California. They live in Northern Europe. I got the impression that the species bloomed during the summer, at least with their climatic situation. Their plants were blooming when ours were dying and ripening seed. It would have been very informative to learn if these species bloomed all summer in their location. Maybe they even bloomed into the autumn? There is still a great deal for me to learn concerning our California native annuals and how the preform with different climatic and day length situations.