Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Cohan,You are talking about www.bluestem.ca and you are right the focus is the larger salix. Also if you can get cuttings I would, salix seed is very short lived and often not viable.
It is good to here S. x boydi is hardy for you, my odds are improved.
Salix seed doesn't come in pods, the mature catkins just disintegrate and shed the finest of fluff. Although there must be billions released, one is never conscious of the seed in the atmosphere as one is, for example, of thistledown.
Rain, snow, rain, snow, rain, snow in the forecast, starting tomorrow and ending Tuesday morning. Winter in Canada. Roads forecast to be treacherous.johnw
I've discovered just today that Salix x Boydii will NOT TOLERATE PROLONGED DRY PERIODS. My 60 year old plant (I was given it when it was at least 30), has died!!! I've done my best to drown it and I'll leave it in case there is some regeneration at the base, but I'm not hopeful.
Until these SRGC forums, I'd never even heard of dwarf groundcover Salix species. Amazing things you learn here. I'd imagine that some here in Aus would have these, but not something I recall ever seeing on a list (although whether I would have noticed before, or just tuned them out as trees/shrubs, is entirely debatable. ).They look rather cool. Thanks for opening new horizons everyone.
Quote from: Susan Band on December 30, 2009, 08:50:21 PMSalix Boydii and Salix reticulata are also good willows ideal for a trough. Don't know about hardiness.SusanBoth hardy here.johnw
Salix Boydii and Salix reticulata are also good willows ideal for a trough. Don't know about hardiness.Susan