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For me, 'he' was looking like a Mandrill..... but one in a good mood! http://animals.nationalgeographic.com
Lovely to see the Empetrum in fruit Knud. I have plants of both that one and E. rubrum but neither has set fruit. Maybe not cold enought here?
I'm suspicious of Lori's plant of Nepeta phylloclamys. I have had this for many years and it makes a small, woody subshrub with felted rather than furry leaves and yes, the flowers are small and insignificant but are in great numbers. What distinguishes them and the whole plant in fact, is that it smells of lavender, one of the coarser species, like L. stoechas. It came to me originally from a Mathew and Tomlinson collection as Origanum species, then after another change to something, ended up as Nepeta phylloclamys. Although a quiet plant, it is one of my favourites, just about 5 or 6cms high and nice at the edge of a trough.
I'm suspicious of Lori's plant of Nepeta phylloclamys. I have had this for many years and it makes a small, woody subshrub with felted rather than furry leaves and yes, the flowers are small and insignificant but are in great numbers.
Not sure if Lori's plant is just a young one, possibly stretched, and/or photographed at rather close range. http://www.wildgingerfarm.com/Nepeta.htm
Your area must be very dry indeed with only 20-25 cm of yearly precipitation!