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Quote from: WimB on May 25, 2009, 07:14:08 AMQuote from: cohan on May 24, 2009, 07:58:38 PMfun to see the maianthemum--which grows wild all over the place here, and is a favourite--here it may just be emerging, if that... where is your plant from?Thanks,I bought the Maianthemum last year from Potterton's.cool..i'll share some pics when ours are active ..slow spring here..
Quote from: cohan on May 24, 2009, 07:58:38 PMfun to see the maianthemum--which grows wild all over the place here, and is a favourite--here it may just be emerging, if that... where is your plant from?Thanks,I bought the Maianthemum last year from Potterton's.
fun to see the maianthemum--which grows wild all over the place here, and is a favourite--here it may just be emerging, if that... where is your plant from?
Geir the pyrethum is lovely. Is it growing outdoors with you? I had this plant twice but have managed to kill it here
Geir, I love the Saxifraga purpurascens, never heard of!
Just a few more pic's taken to day in the garden.3 Anemonella thalicroides (Some named selection.....label fade)
QuoteGeir, I love the Saxifraga purpurascens, never heard of!Lvandelft;I totally agree with you, the Saxifraga purpurascens is a very nice plant. This small member of the section Micranthes comes from the Kliuchevskaia Volcano in the Kamchatka peninsula, where it grows in volcanic ash and cold ravines, is not often seen in culture. To bad, because I find it long lived and quite easy to grow (even if I do not have volcanic ash and a cold ravine in my garden). The whole plant in the picture are about 15 cm across.
It's very difficult to photograph even in the morning light because of the contrast in the sunlight on the bell, as seen in the group shot, but here are my efforts to show you how much it means to me
Jamie,Whatever about pronounciations, I could not live with Acer conspicuum 'Silver Cardinal'. I'm afraid that leaf marking would not attract me at all; quite the opposite effect really.Paddy
Maianthemum canadense is, unfortunately, rather invasive... in the sense that, rather than forming a nice compact clump, it sends up shoots in an ever-expanding radius several inches out from the first plant. I am having to control their advance, now, after a few years. (This is one of my native plants that I did not plant; it showed up on its own. I suppose it was either in the soil with an Amelanchier alnifolia, probably grown on a local tree farm... or maybe it blew in on one of the howling gales we get, LOL!) Seeing it en masse is the wild really is the best thing!Enjoying the wonderful plants!