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Quote from: ranunculus on March 24, 2009, 08:37:49 AMSuper plant Ian ... surely that should have appeared at East Lancashire Show in a very large pot ... a certain prize winner? As a Show Secretary I am normally encouraging folks to put as many plants on the show benches as possible, but I would never be tempted myself to lift a fabulous pulsatilla (Especially one as big as Ian's) to pot it for a show. I have known some people to do this and it has always ended in tears with a dead plant. Here we do find that, having got to the size of Ian's clump, Pulsatillas of most types are inclined to decline or even die off, but I still wouldn't risk lifting one, even for a winning swansong!
Super plant Ian ... surely that should have appeared at East Lancashire Show in a very large pot ... a certain prize winner?
Quote from: Maggi Young on March 24, 2009, 01:26:43 PMQuote from: ranunculus on March 24, 2009, 08:37:49 AMSuper plant Ian ... surely that should have appeared at East Lancashire Show in a very large pot ... a certain prize winner? As a Show Secretary I am normally encouraging folks to put as many plants on the show benches as possible, but I would never be tempted myself to lift a fabulous pulsatilla (Especially one as big as Ian's) to pot it for a show. I have known some people to do this and it has always ended in tears with a dead plant. Here we do find that, having got to the size of Ian's clump, Pulsatillas of most types are inclined to decline or even die off, but I still wouldn't risk lifting one, even for a winning swansong! Please may I retract my original quote, Maggi? I too would never have lifted such a plant simply to win a prize at a show. What I SHOULD have said was; "If that had been grown in a very large pot then it would have swept the board at many a show".I have just spent two minutes on the naughty step!
To Paul T- what zone is Canberra in? If it is too hot for Pulsatilla, is it warm enough for some the plants we can only dream of in colder climes?Flowering today in a trough- the Androsace I am growing as A.darwasica from AGS SeedEx. I have not been able to find out anything about this online ,and looks like other seedlots I have had in the past which were A.septentrionalis and A.fedtschenkoi, which I read somewhere are synonymous.
Cuttings aren't an option and division is risky. Better to grow some fresh seed from your best forms. They germinate quickly and freely and once potted up or pricked out, grow quickly. Usually they flower at about 18 months from seed depending on the time of year the seed was sown.You can make them flower a second time - good for a late show - by feeding with a high potash fertilizer about 2 months before the required date.
The snow is a melting fast, see Crocus vernus vernus scepusiensis in the snow, then, one hour later!