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My meadow today. My Achillea becomes at the most 30 cm.Sorry, no sun
I should also note that there is a recent paper on the evolution of Achillea in North America that provides DNA evidence that the native North American members of the Achillea millefolium aggregate should be recognized as a separate species, Achillea borealis. Achillea borealis is apparently a relatively recent arrival in North America over the Bering land bridge (during the last 500,000 to 1 million years) but in that time it has rapidly diverged into many different ecotypes over a broad range of habitats.Ed
your climate is very different than mine, so perhaps your clover behaves differently--here it is among the most rampant plants in our existing grassy areas, and one of the most difficult weeds to keep out of any planting,though it is far too abundant to eliminate it; here, i think, it would be much too vigorous to leave in a planting of small bulbs, though perhaps with very tall plants it could be managed, though i'm not at all sure of that..
Cohan this is Alpine turf under the Eiger north wall
I try to do the meadow thing but I am far far behind Franz.My strategy is to cut the meadow in late August before the Crocus speciosus start.The hay is left a couple of days if the weather is dry in the hope that any seeds fill fall out.It is then carted away as fodder to his cattle to the guy who keeps most of my land.I never fertilize since this tends to increase the amount of non-flowering plants.All around is a path that is moved with a lawn mover.Problems:Deer eat the crocuses in the spring.Voles eat the corms/bulbs.I get Scilla siberica which I know will take over.CheersGöte