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Cohan: glad you are continuing to wander in 2010! Great stuff and please keep up the detail!! Does Rubus arcticus produce a lot of fruit? It grows in Norway but is quite local in its distribution apart from in the far north (Troms and Finnmark) and fruit is uncommon. How about R. stellatus - do you have that one too?
cohan, sorry i forget that alberta is a big country, not so in germany thanks a lot..cheerschris
thanks, stephen my (admittedly limited) book does not mention stellatus, but from the little i found searching online, it seems to be in b.c. and alaska..i was trying to tell, this year, if there was something besides pubescens and arcticus (of course idaeus grows everywhere) or whether they hybridised, as i see plants of presumably pubescens with some red in the leaf more typical of arcticus, and pinkish flowers, but i think its just natural variation in pubescens..arcticus does not produce a lot of fruit here, at least in the wild, haven't tried cultivating it yet; same for pubescens.. its also possible that they are fruiting more than i know, but many berries are eaten by critters before i see them! certainly by the very wide spread of the plants, it must be getting seeded around...
Cohan, I do so enjoy looking at your Alberta wanderings, please keep 'em coming.
same day; 1-4- at the Castilleja site (not flowering yet then, they are now, i photographed a few yesterday!) the woodlands rich and green, flowering plants just starting...5,6- Aralia nudicaulis; some plants just emerging, and just in bud in early june; growing with:7-Viola canadensis; a purer white flower here than the plants near my house.
Quote from: cohan on June 21, 2010, 07:00:39 PMsame day; 1-4- at the Castilleja site (not flowering yet then, they are now, i photographed a few yesterday!) the woodlands rich and green, flowering plants just starting...5,6- Aralia nudicaulis; some plants just emerging, and just in bud in early june; growing with:7-Viola canadensis; a purer white flower here than the plants near my house.Cohan,Quite interesting to have a look at a side where Viola canadensis grows -My own plants have a lesser part of yellow inside the flowers but seemed to be of a larger size (the plants-not the flowers).What tree/shrub is pic no. 4 ? Is it a Corylus? Gerd
Cohan,Thanks for the tours of your area. Some interesting stuff in there. Here's hoping that those areas that are regenerating after prolonged overgrazing will once more produce the plants that they used to. Maybe they still need to overgrow a bit further yet before conditions are right. It is amazing what can reappear at old sites ones favourable conditions return. Fingers crossed. Thanks again.