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very nice! i guess there must have been an exotic gardener somewhere nearby...do birds carry the seeds?
But there's a small unresolved mystery to this plant. As many of you know, L. camschatense is the Asian counterpart, and is easily distinguished by having white spathes. A Seattle friend on a visit remarked, on seeing the ordinary yellow L. americanum, "gee, I thought those had white flowers. The ones I saw while hiking in the Cascade mountains were white, not yellow."I'm of the opinion that my friend isn't subject to hallucinations, and if he says he saw white skunk cabbage in the Cascades, he did. But try as I might, I was never able to extract an exact location from him; perhaps he didn't remember which hike he'd seen these ghosts on and even the threat of being turned over to the Inquisition had no power.
Quote from: Rodger Whitlock on April 09, 2009, 07:57:41 PMBut there's a small unresolved mystery to this plant. As many of you know, L. camschatense is the Asian counterpart, and is easily distinguished by having white spathes. A Seattle friend on a visit remarked, on seeing the ordinary yellow L. americanum, "gee, I thought those had white flowers. The ones I saw while hiking in the Cascade mountains were white, not yellow."I'm of the opinion that my friend isn't subject to hallucinations, and if he says he saw white skunk cabbage in the Cascades, he did. But try as I might, I was never able to extract an exact location from him; perhaps he didn't remember which hike he'd seen these ghosts on and even the threat of being turned over to the Inquisition had no power.interesting...i have no opinion on yor friend's mental state, but i suppose yellow to white is not such a huge leap for a sport...i'd like to try some here, would have to look into hardiness... much colder than scotland or victoria, of course..