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It would never have occurred to me to think of Montropa as a member of Ericaceae!
Quote from: Lesley Cox on July 01, 2009, 09:34:10 PMIt would never have occurred to me to think of Montropa as a member of Ericaceae! Nor I! I cannot figure out the connection.... more studying to be done..... but when it's cooler..... heatwave time in Aberdeen today!
Here is something you don't see every day, Montropa uniflora, a parasitic member of the Ericaceae. It grow on my sisters property on Cape Cod, along with Cypripedium acaule. There were different colour variants coming up as I departed, but I didn't have time to get shots. Mainly rose tones.
Cohan, Rosa spinosissima is one that produces loads of black hips... perhaps it was that? It's not too uncommon here. (Actually, I don't even remember what colour the hips are on R. primula.... must pay attention this year!)By the way, Rosa 'Agnes' is actually extremely hardy too - it's an old zone 2-3 standard. (Ours is in bloom now.) 'Hansa' is another extremely hardy one... if anything survives of old plantings on an abandoned farmstead, it will be an ancient 'Hansa'.We haven't found our Rosa spinosissima ('Altaica' and v. repens, supposedly) to be extremely fragrant here... though I have read that they ought to be... there is some fragrance but they are far outdone by many others.
Quote from: cohan on July 01, 2009, 05:23:00 PMsimon--i guess you probably know the tricks-- put your hand on the same level as the flowers to focus, or a piece of neutral coloured paper, so the camera has a bigger area to focus on... i know sometimes the cameras seem to have their own agenda...lolWe think the camera has given in after it overheard mention of a pending upgrade
simon--i guess you probably know the tricks-- put your hand on the same level as the flowers to focus, or a piece of neutral coloured paper, so the camera has a bigger area to focus on... i know sometimes the cameras seem to have their own agenda...lol
, Montropa uniflora, a parasitic member of the Ericaceae.
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.2179/0008-7475(2004)069%3C0265%3AACAOMU%3E2.0.CO%3B2lesley,this article, which i have not completely read, is a cladistic study and notes in the title the inclusion in the Ericaceae. There are other general references on the Wikipedia.