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Extraordinary plants, David.
Hi Cliff, No more buttercups but I have some forget-me-nots.1 - 3 Myosotis pulvinaris This cushion Myosotis grow on very exposed sites on the crest of the Range. In picture 2 there is a plant of Chionohebe thomsonii var glabra on the left of the Myosotis pulvinaris and a plant of Chionohebe thomsonii on the right. I may be suffering from a some taxonomic confusion here. It seems the name Chionohebe glabra is valid and may be preferable to Chionohebe thomsonii var glabra4. Mysotis pygmaea. These tiny plants grow in bogs on the crest of the Range.5 Myosotis tenericaulis This is another little Myosotis also found in bogs but this was growing lower down. This is the first time I have ever seen this species.
Is the spelling of 2) not Brachyscome sinclairii or even Brachycombe sinclairii ? I seem to have notes of both of these?
Hi Kris,Myosotis is a very variable genus. There are many forms that are not named so the plants in cultivation in Belgium and the Netherlands may not be M. pulvinaris. M glabrescens is a cushion species similar to Myosotis pulvinaris that is in cultivation in Europe. You may be fortunate to have that as it is known in NZ from only three plants in the wild.
I will slip in a few Raoulias1, 2 Raoulia grandiflora The largest flowered species of Raoulia.