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Quote from: Ragged Robin on July 12, 2009, 09:36:09 PMLori, I was about to say that the wild Anthyllis vulneraria grows here close to the chalet and then saw you has posted a photo of it - it is a strangely intriguing plant and very soft looking. Also Phyteuma scheuchzeri and Campanula barbata (which I absolutely love) are around Great photos of your plants Lori and the sidewalk is a wonderful sample robin--is it a meadow plant? how tall does it get in the wild? it's a pea, right? or am i imagining that?i should just google it, but since you have them wild, interesting to hear about it
Lori, I was about to say that the wild Anthyllis vulneraria grows here close to the chalet and then saw you has posted a photo of it - it is a strangely intriguing plant and very soft looking. Also Phyteuma scheuchzeri and Campanula barbata (which I absolutely love) are around Great photos of your plants Lori and the sidewalk is a wonderful sample
Poul,Announcing Autumn is nothing to be proud of you know
Quote from: Luc Gilgemyn on July 10, 2009, 08:17:17 AMPoul,Announcing Autumn is nothing to be proud of you know Luc, I am a little split up in this matter. I love summer and really enjoy all the nice summerflowers you and others post, but my main interest is in Autumn flowering bulbs and when they start flowering I get excited. I will try not to show my excitement the next two month. Poul
Re: Verbascums- there is a very nice albino of V.rorippifolium, with pink centred white flowers. The name means it has leaves like a Rorippa which is a genus of yellowcress. The leaves look similar, but I think it is one of those botanists running out of ideas things.
6) Linum flavum compactum
Well, IPNI ( International Plant Names Index) ......only recognises this: Verbascum roripifolium (Halácsy) I.K.Ferguson
Cohan, I have only seen it growing on sunny banks from June until Septemberish - actually I think they are a Mediterranean native flower and have silver pinnate leaves with a lovely bright yellow flower with a woolly looking calyx. I hugs the bank so not tall, a few inches, and is very attractive to bees. I am trying to encourage it into our garden so we will see what happens when I scatter the seed Doesn't suggest a pea family but not sure how one would describe it
Poul,I must admit, my favourite times are lat autumn through to spring, because that is when the really interesting and unusual plants I collect tend to flower. The first autumn crocus are always a joy, and the first autumn species of Galanthus to open each year is eagerly watched for. Just ignore these other imbeciles who want to live in an eternal summer..... they obviously don't live here in MY summer, that is for sure.... I think they'd look forward to autumn much more if that were the case.