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Pulsatillas are still flowering1.Pulsatilla vulgaris gotlandica
Robin, Podophyllum emodi is now called P. hexandrum. It is very beautiful both in flower, foliage and fruit, a big, pendant squashy thing, tomato red. It germinates best from fresh seed but is generally easy in a cool, leafy soil but takes a few years to flower, in my experience. The seedlists usually have it.The Arnebia has spots on some flowers and not on others because they appear as the flower ages (have I got that right? or do they start spotted and the spots disappear as the flowers age?) There is some Christian legend about them I think, something to do with fingerprints or ? Someone will know.
Lesley,thanks for giving the comment to Robin and I agree with it. When the Arnebiaflowers open they are nicely dotted and after some days the dots vanish and the flowers are simplyyellow. I asked a chemist about this and she told me, that the dots are probably from anilin colourswhich react with the oxygen in the air. In nature these plants grow in Eastern Turkey and theCaucasus and are very garden worthy plants for full sun or light shade and flower reliable and profusely(sometimes 2-3 times in the year). Seed raising is simple, but caution- plants are tap-rooted.
Wow Lampwick, that Anthyllis looks pretty special. Not come across it before. Very nice.