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Going through my photos, I finally found a photo of Salix hylematica in flower. The photo gives sort of an optical illusion looking like it is sideways, by it is indeed right side up. The trailing branches are cascading over a boulder.
Mark,That is a great photo!
Here's another dwarf Salix, Salix vestita growing at the Oxen Pond Botanic Garden in St John's, NL.It's important to find truly dwarf ones as we saw some as high as a meter of more on Newfoundland's west coast.johnw
Thanks Lesley, I have a septic field in my yard so I need to be careful.Maybe I best move the Hakuro Nishi I have planted in the middle of it. Good luck finding a S. cascadensis, I can't even find a pic of it.
I found a couple of pics by Googling but neither was like the one in my mind. I think the original I saw was in a talk many years ago. Could even have been at "Alpines '81" but I'm not sure now. But the one in your links Mark, looks like a good plant.
Yes Helen, they do have large and congested root systems, as do all willows. I remember in my youth and beginnings as a rock gardener, a local nurserywoman used to dig and use for potting, willow root from a local river bank. She carted the blocks home like peat blocks and put them through a shredding machine then used the chopped stuff instead of peat for all her ericaceous plants. Rhodos loved it and it didn't break down and disappear the way peat does.