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By your lovely photos, Gerd, it seems that you have dry weather in your part of Germany at least. The Digitalis obscura is charming... I love the colour.
Spring Squills..........................wow
Quote from: Martinr on June 25, 2010, 07:17:25 PMSpring Squills..........................wow Are these Scilla verna? I have some plants, maybe 30 from seed collected in the Orkneys by JH and through seedlist. The first flowers were this last spring. Maybe in 100 years, if I spread them around a bit.....
It may be noticed that I have put a signature under my avatar pic. This is because I have bought a new vacuum cleaner and feel obliged to use it. The old one I managed quite successfully to ignore. BUt I don't want to get over enthusiastic about it, hence the signature.
Zdenek, I'm very pleased to see your plant of Saponaria pulvinaris as it was lumped together on the SRGC and AGS seed lists this year with pumilio, as if they were the same thing, and I knew they were not. I wanted to apply for pulvinaris which I used to have in a trough, but didn't, in case I got pumilio, which I had donated. Really nice to see the real thing.
The eastern USA Zenobia pulverulenta is having a great season here; as is Stewartia and the various Cornus kousas.Magnolia tripetala is nearly at the end; but a few stray flowers remain.M. virginiana of course blooms on and off the entire season; seed pods already in evidence as well as more flowers in near bud to come along later.
Kristl, is your Magnolia virginiana heavenly scented? I visited the garden of George Newman in Bedford, New Hampshire, USA two weeks ago, and his M. virginiana tree had an intoxicating fragrance....Back to a southern USA native, he had nice bushes of Zenovia pulverulenta in good glaucous-leaf forms. I had a seed grown plant, which unfortunately was green leaved and lacked any of the beautiful glaucousness; it finally expired this winter; not sad to see it go, a good excuse to get a better glaucous-leaf form... the flowers are exquisite.