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Dave,I thought you had been rather quiet. I was wondering what you were up to. I cannot top a yellow flowered Celmisia. I do not think a yellow-flowered Celmisia has ever been recorded before.
David---- i saw a number of Ranunculus pilifera earlier in the week while Steve Newall and i had a 3 day stroll around the western edge of the Eyre Mtns.Unfortunately the hybrids with R. buchananii were still under snow. Came across plenty of other different 'weeds' in bloom including this interesting one that Steve found--A yellow flowering Celmisia spedenii.Cheers dave
I lust for all of these NZ alpines you show. I'd be happy just being able to grow leaves on a plant like R. haastii. Can't wait to see more.
Quote from: TheOnionMan on December 08, 2010, 02:46:28 AM I lust for all of these NZ alpines you show. I'd be happy just being able to grow leaves on a plant like R. haastii. Can't wait to see more. Mark...if you ever find out how to cultivate these beauties in our climate, give me a call and tell me how you do it.I used to grow these back in England but wouldn't even dare tempt fate in Kentucky. It'd take fans and almost constant automatic watering to get these past the seedling stage, never mind to full flowering.
Amazing to see something other than white on Celmisia, the light yellow is most pleasing, what an extraordinary find. Somewhere in my less-than-accurate recollections I seem to recall hearing about pinkish Celmisia forms in the past, is that right or am I dreaming? David, hopefully you'll note the locale and go back for seed later on. The profile photo of R. pilifera with the mountain backdrop is awesome too.