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Welcome to the Forum Adrian. Great to have "The Last word" on saxes here. Don't encrusted saxifrages just adore troughs and rocky crevices? No alpines look more comfortably at home, in such places. Truly made for such plantings.
Hello Adrian, it was great to see you in Nottingham. Hope you've recovered from the lack of Saxes in the talks?!
Does anyone know if this Saxifraga has a name?I bought it at the SRGC Show at Stirling in March 1990. It was labelled seedling from Winifred and came from Lismore nursery (Brian Burrows).The colour is not quite accurate. It opens a brick red and fades to a biscuit colour. Never going to be a show plant but I like it.
I'm desperately searching for a photo I have of a sax which came to me as seed in the early 70s, from a Czech called Antonin Cernovicky. I doubt if he's alive now as I think he was in his 70s then. Anyway, it had a name which I never could find a reference for and I've forgotten that years ago. But I felt the sax was a cotyledon form and it had a short, (8 cms) stem of white flowers, shaped like a squat pyramid. I'd like your opinion on it, though, alas, I have lost the plant now too. At some stage I had the photo scanned onto a disk but can't find that either. I'll try and find the photo and have it rescanned. Would love to have the plants agaiin, it was really beautiful and different due to the scape shape.