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Quote from: angie on July 13, 2010, 10:36:01 AMHi Angie, check out Hibiscus syriacus 'Blue Bird' here:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=5568.msg159428#msg159428I have specialized in hybriding these things over the last 7-8 years. These things LOVE THE HEAT, that might be part of the reason they are difficult or not free-flowering for you.Mark...your Hibiscus are lovely, maybe my polytunnel will be the place to grow them. My mum managed some years to get her plants to flower but she had a sheltered garden . I have all my mums plants in pots, maybe one day they will flower for me. I have one in the tunnel so will wait and see if the flowers turn yellow and drop off, if they do I can always look at you and Hans plants.Thanks Angie
Hi Angie, check out Hibiscus syriacus 'Blue Bird' here:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=5568.msg159428#msg159428I have specialized in hybriding these things over the last 7-8 years. These things LOVE THE HEAT, that might be part of the reason they are difficult or not free-flowering for you.
Luc - Thanks for that information. Would it be safe to transplant the second tiny seedling out of the pot with the monster? I'll leave all pots outside for the winter but under a plastic cover, maybe the pink one will come next year. The pots were originally kept at 5c after sowing and as mentioned only two came up, I guess not cold enough.johnw
That's looking good, Kris. Do you find that the rough surface of the tufa stops the slugs and snails from attaching the campanulas? Or do they just wear climbing boots and get there to eat the plants just the same?
Campanula zoysii flowering in my tufa-garden.
very nice, a cliff right at home
Kris, remember this one?... the cool night-blooming saponaria endemic to the high regions of the Troodos Mountains, Cyprus; Saponaria cypria.This year the plant is outdoing itself, I think because we've had so much hot weather in the 90s to nearly 100 F (32-37 C) which is to its liking. The last few nights at dusk, the plant looks particularly fetching, lots of bubblegum pink flowers and dark red calyxes hovering just above a low mat of neat succulent spoon-shaped leaves. How wonderful to have a mat-forming Saponaria that flowers so late, typically starting in August, but starting in July this year with our advanced season.