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Nice plant, interesting colour! Viola eizanensis is an easy growing species here, although flowers are very rare, even in spring. Seed is built frequently but only from cleistogamic flowers.
Viola eizanensis has bloomed in April in 2009 and last spring for me. And I had a few seed pods on it whent I bought it in 2008. Interesting, that cleistogamic feature! Do you know if Viola 'Silver Samourai' behaves similarly? I don't know its exact parentage, though some say it could have some V. koreana origin...And their foliage alone is well worth cultivating them.
great images and places, knud! very interesting to see alpines at my altitude (i am a little under 1000m) when we are still so far from alpines!..of course i know there are other conditions of exposure, etc..
Quote from: cohan on October 19, 2010, 06:40:59 AMgreat images and places, knud! very interesting to see alpines at my altitude (i am a little under 1000m) when we are still so far from alpines!..of course i know there are other conditions of exposure, etc..Thanks all for kind comments on pictures. And Cohan, the main other condition is northern exposure, the regions pictured fall between 59 and 61 degrees north, which is about the northern boundary of your province Alberta? The climate on the west coast of Norway, right up north, is tempered by the Gulf Stream, hence our zone 8 garden here in Stavanger, only about 30 km from the Ryfylke hills where the treeline is at about 600 m elevation. Knud
I suppose your 'V. eizanensis' looks V. chaerophylloides. Both are very similar but V. chaerophylloides has almost pentafoliolate leaves all year round, and V. eizanensis has rather pedate leaves especially during summer.
These might well be the last for the year, so here goes with some recent and current ones: 1) Late flowers on Tanacetum tibeticum, from seed this year.
I will be attempting to starve them into character next year...
Another curiosity -Anemone coronaria 'De Caen' in flower.
Here today in flower : Oxytropis multiceps (did'nt expect it this time of the year)Also flowering : Pinguicula 'Weser' .
3) From seed this year, Marmoritis complanatum (was Phyllophyton complanatum)... I realize my soil conditions are much too rich, and assuming these plants survive, I will be attempting to starve them into character next year... see attached:http://www.efloras.org/object_page.aspx?object_id=88858&flora_id=800
I realize my soil conditions are much too rich, and assuming these plants survive, I will be attempting to starve them into character next year... see attached:http://www.efloras.org/object_page.aspx?object_id=88858&flora_id=800
In that photo link, it looks like some little man-like creature, wearing a snow hat with ear flaps, snow jacket, and little furry booties! What a remarkable plant manifestation!