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Thanks Maggi, I eventually figured it out but even so, the merged thread message was also saying "An Error....." I tend to get a bit paranoid when something isn't as I expect it to be.
Gosh, aren't those solidas of Janis just gorgeous, especially the last, dark and sombre one.
I'm really enjoying all the Corydalis and all the solida forms, being such good garden plants here, are hard to beat.
I'll keep my fingers crossed for your success with them, Cohan, for they really are an asset to the early garden.
Corydalis solida and a number of other corydalis species, seem to be hardy here, Cohan.
thanks, lori; i was just noticing kristl lists solida as zone 2 (wild collected in finland)
Quote from: Maggi Young on April 19, 2010, 12:09:01 AMI'll keep my fingers crossed for your success with them, Cohan, for they really are an asset to the early garden. thanks, maggi--i am hopeful, since a gardener in winnipeg on another list has had some success with them (when they weren't eaten by something- rabbits or deer i think it was!) warmer summers on average there, but just as cold or colder in winter..i'd love to have some naturalised patches around the woodland edges i have so much of!
lots of interesting thoughts:janis-full sun spots are at a premium here, though i do have many places that get sun part of the day while it is high in summer;panu-always good to see things growing in a cold place gote-i don't have enough experience yet on this property to know what my animal problems will be--there is plenty of wildlife in the woods, but so far i have only seen signs of deer and moose coming to eat the shrubs in winter; i think as i have more species green when natives aren't, i might have more trouble..as for who will eat roots and bulbs, i will have to see how it goes--mice are abundant under the snow in winter, but i assume they cannot get into the soil at that time as it is frozen-maybe i am wrong and they dig right throught the frozen earth?do you put the metal on the surface or all around the tubers?
For a single bulb I get a piece of metal net. 6x6" square, 1/4" mesh. It is best if the net is wowen so the wires can move. I bend down 2" on each side to form a kind of basket. The corners will form "legs" which I twist and sometimes cut off. I make sure the soil is loose to sufficient depth and plant the corm 1.5-2" deep with 1/2" layer of soil on top. I then press down the basket (upside down of course) so the net is at least 3/4" below the soil surface and fill in. This will prevent the mice from getting at the corm. It is important that the net is below soil surface at all times. A plant will easily get through below ground but will be trapped if the net is at the surface. The added advantage is that it is easy to locate the corm again. It will sit in the basket. Of course it is necessary to replant often. A Corydlis solida is likely to double each year and the basket will soon be crowded. However, if I have many, I sometimes do not bother with all of them. If I have more bulbs/corms of a kind, I make a larger basket. I try to do this for all precious bulbs/corms (that are not big and planted deep) except amaryllidaceae which are not eaten by rodents.I have never noticed mice digging in frozen soil.To keep the deer out I use a 6' net around the area. Chicken net on wooden poles 4 yards apart. It is rather flimsy (and ugly ) but the deer do not bother since they can feed in other places. Outside of the fence I sometimes put a piece of chicken net over plants that I want to save. Ugly but it works.CheersGötePSI train shrubs and climbers to the fence so the ugliness is somewhat hidden.