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Wonderful photos of the Haastias, David. Wooly enough to be sheep even when less than lamb-sized!I find the use of the name Melicytus alpinus ' Blondin ' intriguing: how does a plant in the wild come to have a cultivar name?
R. insignis 'monroi' is so very different from the R. insignis I grow in my garden ... leaf shape, hairiness, stem length, etc. ... were they once classed as separate species?Please keep posting these beautiful and interesting photos.
Quote from: ranunculus on December 03, 2011, 10:32:16 AMR. insignis 'monroi' is so very different from the R. insignis I grow in my garden ... leaf shape, hairiness, stem length, etc. ... were they once classed as separate species?Please keep posting these beautiful and interesting photos.Ranunculus monroi Hook f. was considered a distinct species and is listed as such in the Flora of New Zealand vol 1 by H.H. Allan. However it was included in the circumspection of Ranunculus insignis along with Ranunculus lobulatus by Fisher. It is illustrated as "Ranunculus monroi" in Mark and Adams and is described as a smaller southern form of Ranunculus insignis. Black Birch is quite high and exposed and thus the plants there tend to be smaller than typical Ranunculus insignis
Not sure how you came to be mixed up in this. Dave Toole was very complimentary about the Explorers Garden.