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Maybe. Would you like me to show your photos to someone who might know if you can make some money from your find?Photos 1, 2 and 4 look better turned anti clockwise.
Prompted by the mention of Valerian in the wildlife thread, I am posting a few pictures of deviant Valerians for your amusement/comment. Last summer I was taking part in a local flora mapping project in our local area, mapping 1x1 km square areas. Together with 4 botanists we were out registering plants in the middle of a bog when I noticed something white amidst the green. Upon closer examination it turned out to be a variegated Valeriana sambucifolia ssp procurrens. The botanists with me hardly batted an eyelid at my discovery, but this was for me the most interesting plant all day . I took the variegated bit with me home. Unlike Valeriana officinalis, sambucifolia (considered by some to be a subspecies) is a very invasive plant in a garden (as I discovered many years ago), sending out long runners both below and above ground (I’ve long given up trying to remove my original introduction). I’ve constrained it to a pot and I show a few pictures below. Its variegation is, as you can hopefully see, almost completely symmetric . The leaflets on one side of the compound leaf are completely creamy white and normal green on the other side. Close examination also shows that the leaf stem is also white on one side. The plant has sent out runners in two opposite directions, stopped by the edge of the pot. In one direction they are creamy white and in the other direction normal green. I presume the white shoots wouldn’t survive long in nature as, lacking chlorophyll would be weaker and only the mother plant would be variegated. Is it possible to propagate this plant? Several visitors to the garden have asked if they could have a bit! Will be interesting to see what the seedlings will be like (it hasn’t flowered yet).