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Quote from: Sinchets on June 30, 2009, 01:22:03 PMWe have seeds on some D.meadia (possibly hybrids) just now and I am currently growing Dd.conjugens and jeffreyi from US wild seeds. You are right though they are little stunners when flowering. We have them in a woodland bed where they are quite, dry but shaded in summer.do these species stay tiny for you?my wildflower book gives size ranges from 10-20cm fro conjugens and 5-50 for pulchellum..not sure if different clones stick to a height, or if its all environmental..certainly a number of plants that grow higher up and here are much taller down here...here, the dodecs are flowers basically of wet meadows, what we call sloughs, which could have standing water in spring and in wet years, and could be dry or merely moist in dryer years/by midsummer..i suspect similar of the spots i found them in the mountains...
We have seeds on some D.meadia (possibly hybrids) just now and I am currently growing Dd.conjugens and jeffreyi from US wild seeds. You are right though they are little stunners when flowering. We have them in a woodland bed where they are quite, dry but shaded in summer.
Must look for that little primula on the seedlists, a real cutie.
No, here our Dodecatheon have been taller than they were in England- they came here bare-rooted during their summer dormancy. This Spring they were about 25cm in shade and in a woodlandy soil behind the barn. In England they were in polystyrene fishboxes in a peaty soil, but out in the sun and were shorter. I imagine a lot of the differences in the wild are cultural. We hope to build numbers up so we can try some out in a seasoanlly wet area of the meadow in the next few years. It would be great to see them settle in and self sow like that.
Just dropping by to drool over those glorious 'peas'- I had some Hedysarum boreale from seed this year, but some caterpillars trashed them next year I will be more vigilant.