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Townsendia leptotes... please don't tell me this is one of the monocarpic ones! Polemonium confertum, developing buds...Draba ventosa.
Here's some flowering for me :1) Iris hookeri2) Penstemon 'Six Hills'3) Oxalis 'Ione Hecker'4) Primula flaccida (Thanks Lesley !! )5) Aquilegia 'Blueberry'6-7-8-9 : All wonderful hybrids of Lewisia x rediviva - magic from Michael J. Campbell !! - and they're barely starting to flower Michael !!
Ah, what you need is a thicket of Gaultheria shallon, aka "salal".
Luc, Aquilegia ‘Blueberry’ looks good- and ideas as to its parentage?
Quote from: Rodger Whitlock on May 15, 2009, 09:37:23 PMAh, what you need is a thicket of Gaultheria shallon, aka "salal".Nice plant that it is, unfortunately G. shallon is 'breaking out' in SW Ireland & on its way to becoming an aggressive weed. The same may happen or have happened in western Scotland, NZ & similar climates.
Quote from: gote on May 08, 2009, 07:15:15 PMAnyone knows who sells mucronulatum??GöteGöteI can send you tiny seedlings of the dwarf form called variously Rhododendron mucronulatum 'Cheju', mucronulatum v. chejuensis, mucronulatum v. ciliatum and correctly as mucronulatum v.taguetii. It is dwarf and purplish with a beautiful thick trunk 10cm in diameter though only 30cm high after 25 years. It seeds about my yard, in the troughs and various pots. Also have a pink tall mucronulatum of which I could send seed.Just assessing some new dwarf pink ones with very red buds and one has opened a very clear pink. Still lusting for the dwarf white one selected in Japan.johnw[johnw , just came across this post- glad to have the correct name now for the dwarf form . I imported a plant of it from Scotland some 35 years ago under the name Rh. mucronulatum ,dwarf form ,col. summit of Cheju Island , Korea , it is now about 35 cm tall and in autumn colour. Also grow the tall purple-pink one and the clear pink ./quote]
Anyone knows who sells mucronulatum??Göte
Cohan, even if the seedlist pulsatilla seeds don't come exactly true, every one is a beauty. I find in the garden that seed from white does make white seedlings, likewise reds from red, purples from purple etc, IN GENERAL, and sometimes the DEPTH or shade of colour varies. Species like alpine, vernalis etc come true (vulgaris seems to keep to itself) and wild collected seed is usually pretty true. But hey, don't you enjoy a lucky dip? And it's worth growing on a whole batch to flowering because especially with white, you will get some thin-petalled plants with weak colour and some with thick texture and solid, clean colour.