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I have a feeling there might be a lot more pulsatillas being grown as a result of this thread!
I have wondered why kostyczewii is placed in Pulsatilla but thought perhaps it is because of genetic studies, and it does have involucrate leaves as the Pulsatillaīs. But the rest is very much Anemone?
Tim, you wrote that Pulsatilla occidentalis was placed back into Anemone. I did not know that. But I have to reread what Diane wrote about it, I did not really understand.
A gold-haired Pulsatilla vulgaris bud. I do not know the origin of the seeds but would really like to know if the white-haired and golden-haired appear in the same populations or if it is a geographical difference? Is there anyone who knows?
Strange how folks have trouble with P. alpina ssp apifolia. It is one of the longest lived pulsatillas here, plants surviving 30 years or more, since it was called P. sulphurea Eventually reaching a huge size and flowering reliably on mum's open day every year. Perhaps they like our cool summer.Last year I saved some seed but left it lying around until the spring and then I got round to sowing it and all came up and were transplanted into plugs. They don't make very good selling plants as in the first year they only put up one large true leaf.One plant was once dug from the garden (probabally close to flowering) and transfered into a washing up basin to be used in a display, it lasted in that bowl for 3-4 years before getting too tried to be used anymore and was given away. Lots of the roots left in the ground produced young plants and were then transfered no problem.Oleg if you are over here again remind me and I will look for some plug plants Susan