Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Mark,love the irisses. And Viola pedata is really lovely. I bought it several times here in Belgium (as a plant and as seed) and everytime I got Viola pedatifida. I'll have to buy it in the UK next time.
Wim,Had the same experience - 99,5 % pedatifida (plants and seeds) - but as a compensation, Viola pedatifida is much easier Gerd
After many attempts to grow V. pedata and always getting V. pedatifida, Jim Waddick, a kindly American took pity on me and sent seed. I'd still love to have the bicolor forms and the white though.
I think I would have put 'Dick Redfield' (the iris) on the compost heap. Don't like it at all.
Not sure why it is so difficult to get the real thing, it makes lots of seed. Perhaps because there are a number of dissected leaf Viola species here in the USA, and assumptions get made regarding identifications, particularly overseas where they are unfamiliar with the various US dissected leaf violets. The type species was first described for the so-called bicolor form, which I find is not as strong a grower as the more widespread concolorous form, which itself is amazingly variable in almost every aspect. All white forms I have seen are junk, small flowered and weak growers. Why go for these pallid inferior forms, when there are amazing forms in every shade of blue, to deep midnight blue. I upload some images from my garden, all were taken in the early 2000s before the wild bunnies started coming in and decimating my plants.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on May 16, 2010, 02:10:57 AMAfter many attempts to grow V. pedata and always getting V. pedatifida, Jim Waddick, a kindly American took pity on me and sent seed. I'd still love to have the bicolor forms and the white though. Not sure why it is so difficult to get the real thing, it makes lots of seed. Perhaps because there are a number of dissected leaf Viola species here in the USA, and assumptions get made regarding identifications, particularly overseas where they are unfamiliar with the various US dissected leaf violets. The type species was first described for the so-called bicolor form, which I find is not as strong a grower as the more widespread concolorous form, which itself is amazingly variable in almost every aspect. All white forms I have seen are junk, small flowered and weak growers. Why go for these pallid inferior forms, when there are amazing forms in every shade of blue, to deep midnight blue. I upload some images from my garden, all were taken in the early 2000s before the wild bunnies started coming in and decimating my plants.
Mark I really love Iris cristata 'Shenandoah Sky' is a real gem, but much as I admired Dick Redfield (the man) I think I would have put 'Dick Redfield' (the iris) on the compost heap.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on May 16, 2010, 01:48:52 AMMark I really love Iris cristata 'Shenandoah Sky' is a real gem, but much as I admired Dick Redfield (the man) I think I would have put 'Dick Redfield' (the iris) on the compost heap. And I would have rescued it from your compost heap and brought it home.... I like both forms!