Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
A super rock garden indeed, with the plants happily nestled against the rocks. I thought there was sand laid on some of the paths but it seems to be a Raoulia?
For David and Luc and everyone else.My rock garden is ‘work in progress’. I looked at it a couple of years ago and thought it looked like a patchwork quilt of miscellaneous plants dotted amongst the rocks. So I began to reduce the number of varieties and bulk up the ones I wanted to increase.Graham
For David and Luc and everyone else.My rock garden is ‘work in progress’. I looked at it a couple of years ago and thought it looked like a patchwork quilt of miscellaneous plants dotted amongst the rocks. So I began to reduce the number of varieties and bulk up the ones I wanted to increase.
Thank you Zdenek for your notes. Perhaps you could confirm for me then, that I should be calling the plant below, Saponaria pumila? I had thought that pumila was used by people who didn't realize that the correct name was pumilio! Seems I was quite wrong about this. (Attachment Link) This means that what I have distributed as S. pumilio was actually S. pumila and those expecting to get pulvinaris, will have received pumila instead. Oh dear.
Quote from: Graham Catlow on June 30, 2010, 09:10:09 PMFor David and Luc and everyone else.My rock garden is ‘work in progress’. I looked at it a couple of years ago and thought it looked like a patchwork quilt of miscellaneous plants dotted amongst the rocks. So I began to reduce the number of varieties and bulk up the ones I wanted to increase.Quite a different approach from what most of us tend to do Graham - but it does look super !! I recognise your giant Raoulia from the AGS photo competition 2009... it caught my eye then and it does now !! Brilliant.Thanks very much for taking the time to show us all this !
hello hans, Petrorhagia prolifera is here by me in sothwestern germany wild on dry places...cheerschris
Dear Luc and Luit,Would you please note (see above) that what you received from me as Saponaria pumilio, is actually S. pumila. S. pumilio (further above) is an old (invalid?) name for S. pulvinaris, which I don't have now.
Many thanks LucYes you are correct the Raoulia was in the AGS on line show. Beaten quite rightly by your very impressive Arenaria granatensis tetraquetra. I remember seeing it again in this thread a few weeks ago.Graham