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I have to challenge you on E. davidii - the plant you show is E. ecalcaratum. It may go around under the wrong name because it was already shown in this thread with the same/wrong name.I answered last year to ChrisB about davidii - "(note: the one posted by Gerrrit as davidii shows an E. ecalcaratum)"
I cannot remember if we've mentioned this website before - but I've just been reminded about it by McMark. Epimedium Info is a site run by Lars Ulsamer in Germany. Large gallery of photos of species and hybrids :http://www.epimedium.info/
I'm sorry, but I'm not convinced. E. ecalcaratum has completely different shaped flowers and the leaves are different too. E. ecalcaratum has more campanulate flowers (especially when the flower ages, they open up more) This one stays box-shaped (like davidii). The shape of the leaf of ecalcaratum is more rounded than the one on this plant, and the veins in the leaves of ecalcaratum are more pronounced than the veins in my plant's leaves. And sometimes this plant does give spurred flowers in between the unspurred ones.But...I have to agree that it does look like it is close to ecalcaratum too...so,both ecalcaratum and davidii grow in the wild in Sichuan (I don't know if they grow in the same regions but they grow in the same conditions and in the same province) and I have to wonder, if they sometimes do hybridise....and if this might be a hybrid...my plant came from Gerrit, so maybe he can shed some more light on this. I don't know where his plant originated from. Maybe it is a garden hybrid?
A good website, didn't browsed all species but unfortunately he also shows for E. davidii EMR 4125 - an E. ecalcaratum. It must be that someone in the region sold this plant wrongly labeled and then was 'propagated' like that to others.I took few pictures from Stearn Epimediums Monography to clarify this - E. davidii EMR 4125
I'm not trying to convince you Wim, just presenting facts I cannot grow many of these Epimediums but that hasn't stopped me to read a lot about them. .........Here is as well from Stearn Monography - E. ecalcaratum picture with flowers showing variability in the wildThe description....... Also, I don't know if many are aware about the UK National collection of Epimedium - hold by Roger and Linda Hammond in Brentwood, Essex. They also have good pictures showing variations on E. ecalcaratum (please excuse few misspellings).http://www.epimedium-collection.com/ecalceratum.html
Why can't you grow a lot of them? Does it get to cold where you live? Which ones do well over there?