Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum

General Subjects => Flowers and Foliage Now => Topic started by: Magnar on July 01, 2007, 10:28:29 PM

Title: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 01, 2007, 10:28:29 PM
(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/saussurea_obvallata_1_103.jpg)

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/saussurea_obvallata_684.jpg)

Saussurea obvallata
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 01, 2007, 10:30:13 PM
(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/olsyniumpercent20biflorum1_696.jpg)

Olsynium biflorum
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 02, 2007, 01:05:15 AM
Magnar, does this Olsynium have a strong scent?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 02, 2007, 09:41:25 AM
Here are some pictures of what is flowering with me at the moment.

Michauxia campanuloides has come into maybe full splendor by now, and I am surprised the flowers hold so well. The first flower which opened on June 25 looked just as fine on July 1. There are many buds waiting to open, and hopefully I will get some seed.

The wild form of Schizanthus grahamii ( from SeedHunt ) has grown like cress in the wet cool weather we have been having over the past weeks, and I've had to top it several times to keep it back. The flowers are exquisite !

Salvia praeclara ( also from SeedHunt ) is another nice annual which I haven't grown before, and it does well here even if it hails from Bolivia.

Delphinium viridescens

Centaurea cyanoides

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 02, 2007, 11:37:12 AM
Magnar, does this Olsynium have a strong scent?

No, there is just a very weak scent from the flower.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 05, 2007, 09:50:10 PM
Here is my Lilium monadelphum today

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/lilium_monadelphum_113.jpg)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: David Pilling on July 05, 2007, 10:28:45 PM
Here is my Lilium monadelphum today


That is impressive - how long did it take to grow, reading your web site I presume you sometimes grow them from seed.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 05, 2007, 10:37:20 PM
Yes, I grew this from seeds several years ago, and as far as I can rememeber now, it took 5 years till I had the first flower
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 06, 2007, 12:34:54 AM
What a glorious lily Magnar! I'm looking forward to my seedlings growing so well but they'll need a few more years yet. Well worth the wait though :D
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 06, 2007, 09:13:55 AM
It is stunning Magnar and I am hoping that next year mine will flower.  They have the substance and seem to be flowering height but no buds this year.  :-\
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: David Pilling on July 06, 2007, 12:21:49 PM
Yes, I grew this from seeds several years ago

Probably a question that betrays dimness on my part, on your web site you've got a huge database of seeds, are the germination times in days or weeks?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 06, 2007, 01:41:38 PM
Yes I like that lily very much,, I prefer the Lilium species, not so much interested in all the named hybrids.  I also collect Fritillaria and Nomocharis.. and I'm so lucky to have no lily beetles up here  :)

David: The germination times are in days. It is said in the Norwegian text,  but I see it has fallen out of the English text when I rearranged the page.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 06, 2007, 09:24:57 PM
I have been photographing some wildflowers today which are flowering in southeastern Sweden now.

Starting out with some orchids:

Epipactis atrorubens, which grows in calcareous areas, both on stony screes and in more moist locations,


Gymnadenia conopsea



and Dactylorhiza maculata ssp fuchsii



Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 06, 2007, 09:29:38 PM
There were also some other nice species growing in the same area, and here are some pictures of Geranium sanguineum, where I have placed my thumb next to the flower in comparison.

There are also some pictures of Pyrola rotundifolia
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 06, 2007, 09:30:06 PM
Beautiful images Paul...many thanks for posting.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 06, 2007, 09:31:33 PM
....Nice clean fingernail too.....congratulations!    ;)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 06, 2007, 11:15:36 PM
Lovely pics, Paul. We have most of those plants in the wild also here up north.

From yuor first posting in this thread I especially like Centaurea cyanoides. Did you grow it from seeds?

Thanks for posting
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 07, 2007, 08:56:39 AM
Thank you for your kind comments on the pictures. You both take some pretty amazing photographs yourself.

Regarding Centaurea cyanoides I have raised the plants from seed from Israel.



Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 08, 2007, 06:10:11 PM
After many years of waiting I have finally got bloom in my Lathyrus chilensis plant, which I raised from seed purchased through Chiltern back in or 2001 or 2002, so it has taken quite some time to build up a large enough root to flower.

Does anyone know if L. chilensis is a verified name. When I did some net searching I found it described under the synonym Lathyrus hookeri as well.




Lilium formosanum var pricei is also flowering in the 15 C , rainy weather we are experiencing here in SE Sweden now.

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: johanneshoeller on July 08, 2007, 07:47:50 PM
Lilium martagon and martagon cattaniae.

Hans



Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Armin on July 09, 2007, 05:49:32 PM
Yesterdays night my Echinopsis Hybrid opened its flowers and enjoyed my eyes.
Later the night there was heavy rainfall... :-[
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Martin Baxendale on July 09, 2007, 09:12:34 PM
Not exactly a rock garden-size broom (unless you have an enormous rock garden) but I just love my Mount Etna broom (Genista aetnensis) at this time of year. Nice scent too, blowing in through the sitting room window, and the first floor bedroom window, and the second floor bedroom window!  ;D  Had it for about ten years and it just gets better and better. The last pic is taken from the bedroom window.



Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 09, 2007, 10:45:58 PM
A favourite of mine too Martin - that wonderful warm frargrance. Mine is also about 10 years old and rather leggy now, should have been pruned judiciously when young but I'm growing on some seedlings and will replace it in a year or so. Everyone should have it.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Anthony Darby on July 09, 2007, 11:57:26 PM
Surely you haven't aged that much in 10 years Lesley? ::)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: annew on July 10, 2007, 07:32:01 AM
Am I the only person who thinks the Genista smells of the stale beer on the kitchen floor after a student party  :-X (those were the days)?
But then, my Trachelospermum asiaticum smells of Germolene too.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: annew on July 10, 2007, 10:44:31 AM
I just found this self-sown geranium seedling in the garden, which I think is rather nice. I'll have to mark it so I don't weed it out.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 10, 2007, 10:46:53 AM
Nice clear whiteflower, Anne. What height is the plant? Looks what I would call middling!......about 15- 18 inches? ( 35 -45 cms?)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: annew on July 10, 2007, 12:07:03 PM
Spot on, Maggi.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Martin Baxendale on July 10, 2007, 12:36:38 PM
Am I the only person who thinks the Genista smells of the stale beer on the kitchen floor after a student party  :-X (those were the days)?

How well I remember that smell; and waking up licking that floor.  ;D

Though I don't personally get that from the Genista aetnensis, Anne. More of a (as Lesley says) warm summery scent, difficult to pin down, but sort of dry hay or straw smell in there, just seems to evoke hot summer meadows for me. Mind you, it's especially difficult for me to evaluate clearly as it's mixed with the smell of the Hoheria 'Glory of Amlwch' flowers (the white-flowered shrub in my pics) which come out at the same time. They look good together, but the hoheria is much stronger scented. Most people say it's a honey scent, but to me and my wife it smells of stables and horses! Not exactly unpleasant, but definitely unusual.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 10, 2007, 01:02:52 PM
Personally, I try not to lick floors.... plates now.... that's a different matter! ::)
In another life I will research how smells are perceived so differently by people... and in different contexts etc... fascinating subject. ???

Still trying to comprehend HUGE size of Martin's Genista... wot a whopper! I don't think I've seen one so tall....are these giants common in Englandshire?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Martin Baxendale on July 10, 2007, 01:26:01 PM
Still trying to comprehend HUGE size of Martin's Genista... wot a whopper! I don't think I've seen one so tall....are these giants common in Englandshire?[/quote]

Maggi, my parents used to have one almost as tall. Mine must be 18 to 20 ft tall. Some people like to keep them bushier with early pruning, but I like them as a small tree. I love to see the flowers against the blue of the sky. Also, I planted it to hide the telephone and power poles and lines in the street without cutting out too much daylight (the v. narrow shoots and leaves cast little shade). I think I recall reading that E.A. Bowles had one on his rock garden, but it was a pretty massive rock garden. In a big enough rockery, I'm sure it'd look magnificent topping a crest and silhouetted against the sky. In winter I like that silhouette effect; the thin shoots dark against the sky.

Here's a quick snap taken out of the sitting room window that gives a better idea of the shape and height.

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 10, 2007, 09:53:49 PM
A couple of nice Centaureas.

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/centaurea_bagadensis_p70945_362.jpg)

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/centaurea_bagadensis1_144.jpg)

Centaurea bagadensis


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/centuarea_triumfettii_p7034_174.jpg)

Centaurea triumfettii
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 10, 2007, 10:15:40 PM
From the gravel bed:

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/delphinium_alpestre_185.jpg)

Miniateur Delphinium alpestre


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/phyllophyton_complanatum_p7_891.jpg)

Phyllophyton complanatum


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/eryophyton_wallichii_p70745_150.jpg)

Eriophyton wallichii
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 10, 2007, 10:32:00 PM
Goodness me, Martin, it's even bigger than I realised! :-X   Pretty thing, though, not too heavy, as you say, so good for your purpose of disguising the wires etc.

Magnar, Eriophyton wallichii is one of my favourites... so furry one could keep it as a pet. This year ours were rather floppy in growth and went over very quickly. I presume this was due to our strange weather ... it has not done that before and the plants are well established. Ours are grown in pots, in an unheated glass house, while yours seems to be enjoying life outside. Have you had it long?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 11, 2007, 04:17:58 AM
I like hoherias too but (and I can say this, they're ours) when in bloom they attract blowflies. Maybe they don't do that in the UK's ever-so-slightly cooler climate?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Ian Y on July 11, 2007, 06:14:20 PM
As many of you will have found out already we suffered some problems with our server today and we were all denied access to the site.

Thank you to every one who emailed or telephoned us to report the problem as we are not always on line to find out.

Sorry if you thought you were being singled out and denied your daily fix on the forum but we were all excluded for the day.

It did do some good though as Maggi did some house cleaning!!!!!

I better go and tell her we are back on line again.

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 11, 2007, 09:40:40 PM
Some more plants flowering at the time being here in Sweden.

Loasa triphylla, which as many members of the Loasaceae-family has stinging hairs. The flowers are pendant, but if you turn them upside down a little architectural wonder meets your eye. I got seeds of this as Loasa nana through the German plant society Gesellschaft der Staudenfreunde 06/07, but I am fairly confident this is not L. nana. The plants are about 20 cm tall, growing in a container.

Also flowering is Papaver fugax which I collected seeds of in Turkey in 2003. It is a biennial, which self-seeds in favourable sites, and blooms profusely the second year. The flowers open in the morning and have lost their petals by the afternoon, but there are new flowers coming along every day.

Phacelia viscida is also beginning to flower. It has been so wet here, so it has got a bit leggy, so I have cut it back several times to try to keep it fairly compact. Very nice blue color.

Another annual is Tinantia erecta, which opens its flowers shortly, but the purple styles sticking out from the flowers are charming in a subtle way, looking a bit like snakes tongues.


I finish with some pictures of a VERY wooly ( and fairly short )Verbascum sp collected in Turkey in 2004. The single flowers are in the leaf nodes and open early in the morning and fall off in the afternoon. It is in its third year with me now, and has flowered in 2006 as well, so it seems to be perennial.

Oh, yes I got seeds in the 2005/2006 SRGC seed exchange  ( nr 529 ), which was supposed to be Asclepias rubra. It has grown very quickly already flowering its second year, and it has become evident that it is not A. rubra, but Vincetoxicum nigrum, which is also in the Apocynaceae-family, but a far shot from Asclepias rubra.







Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: henkw on July 11, 2007, 09:48:30 PM
Paul you very brave to take the loasa in your hand.

I can still feel the sting in my fingers  :'(

Henk
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 12, 2007, 09:58:57 AM
Magnar, Eriophyton wallichii is one of my favourites... so furry one could keep it as a pet. This year ours were rather floppy in growth and went over very quickly. I presume this was due to our strange weather ... it has not done that before and the plants are well established. Ours are grown in pots, in an unheated glass house, while yours seems to be enjoying life outside. Have you had it long?

Yes it grows in the open scree bed. All my plants grow in the open garden and I don't do anything to protect them. But most winters we have a snow cower, although it has not been so stable the later years as it used to be.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: derekb on July 12, 2007, 07:15:21 PM
 The last of my Disa to flower,
 Disa uniflora Fontein
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 12, 2007, 08:29:12 PM
That's a beaytiful flower. Wish the plant would be hardy up here, but I don't think it is.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 12, 2007, 11:10:04 PM
It's not hardy here Magnar, where I get very little frost compared with Norway I should imagine. This year has been harder than the last 10, with frosts at my house to about -8C I've had a couple of losses already. I grow the Disa in a plastic tunnel house.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 12, 2007, 11:32:24 PM
Talking of hardy, remember this?

[attachthumb=1]

Here it is today

[attachthumb=2]

It has been in the tunnel house all this time and it never occurred to me that it would be too cold in there. I went in today to check on the cuttings Dave Toole gave me last October, of Asteranthera ovata. They're fine but I was horrified to see Oxalis peninsularis (or pedicularis) is a gonner. I don't think anything will regenerate.

Said to be tender but unscathed so far (also in the tunnel) is Nicotiana `Lime Green,' ostensibly an annual but I find the roots sprout away each year.

[attachthumb=3]

Disa uniflora still has a little green leaf on it and that looks OK too.

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 13, 2007, 07:40:15 PM
Today's round with the camera:

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/sedum_dumulosum_p7124650_614.jpg)
Sedum dumulosum

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/physoplexis_comosa_p7124651_208.jpg)
Physoplexis comosa

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/dicentra_peregrina_p7124608_168.jpg)
Dicentra peregrina

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/lewisia_rediviva_p7124635_140.jpg)
Lewsia rediviva

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/dianthus_pavonius_p7124610_207.jpg)
Dianthus pavonius

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/dianthus_plumarius_v_735.jpg)
Dianthus plumarius
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 14, 2007, 02:54:17 AM
What a lovely collection Magnar, especially that stunning Dicentra. Many thanks.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on July 15, 2007, 12:57:11 PM
I better do some catch up in this Flowering Now section - way too much swift watching over the last two months.

Annuals and Geraniums

a shrubby perennial daisy bush that is still without a name. In the winter it dies down to underground buds just below the surface. Masses of flowers from now to frosts

Corynephorus - A grass I wish I had. Photographed in Dublin Bots this week

Unknown Daphne suckering from the base of my 'Jacqueline Postill' - no scent

Dianthus 'Elizabethan' as it should be. The flowers shown last month were lacking the picotee edge

Dianthus 'Pudsey Prize- callizonus x alpinus - suddenly dead. Drowned most likley

Grindelia aka Gum Weed

Papaver corona-sancti stephani

Rhodohypoxis 'Kiwi Joy'

Unknown daisy in close up - same as the one above


Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on July 15, 2007, 05:22:35 PM
Here are some pics made yesterday in my garden - including some of the autumn flowering species
 1.  Scilla autumnalis
 2. Cyclamen purpurascens
 3. Acis rosea (syn. Leucojum roseum) - outside!
 4. Alllium sikkimensis
 5. Pulicaria dysenterica - common fleabane, seeds collected in Cornwall
 6. Cardiandra alternifolia - Hydrangeaceae
 7. Platycrater arguta - Hydrangeaceae
 8. Desfountainia spinosa - Desfountainiaceae from Chile - not hardy here
 9. Alstroemeria aurea - seeds collected at Vocan Llaima/Chile
10. Malvastrum lateritium - Malvaceae - not hardy here

Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Germany - 33 ° C this moment
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on July 15, 2007, 05:30:18 PM
Here is the rest:

11. Geranium cinereum - white form from Gavarnie - Pyrenees
12. Lobelia species - from seeds collected in Tsitisikamma NP, South   Africa - not hardy
13. Silene keiskei var. akaisialpina

Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on July 15, 2007, 06:20:33 PM
I too have Leucojum/Acis in flower. L/A autumnale
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 15, 2007, 08:23:53 PM
Gerd and Mark, thanks for the pics both of you. It's fun to see all the different plants and flowers.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Martin Baxendale on July 15, 2007, 08:27:47 PM
Mark, the scentless white daphne suckering from the base of your D. bholua 'Jaqueline Postill' is probably D. longilobata, which is quite widely used as an understock for grafting daphnes. I'd pull it off if I were you.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on July 15, 2007, 08:52:03 PM
Martin it's not quite at the base the stems are coming but from 1, 3 and 6 inches up. The grafts must have been poorly positioned. The new growth this year is already 18 inches 46cm
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Martin Baxendale on July 15, 2007, 11:18:17 PM
Then I'd prune the shoots off as close to the main trunk as possible, otherwise they'll sap energy from the D. bholua. And watch out for new buds shooting from around the same areas - rub them off with your thumb as soon as they start to break into growth.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Susan Band on July 16, 2007, 06:40:38 PM
Here is a picture of Calochortus superbus making a brave effort to flower during all today's rain.
I have the label showing that it was sown in Nov 2001, it is growing along with every thing else in gritty open beds and was quite a surprise seeing it flowering, maybe last year's hot summer encouraged it.
I did grow a lot of different ones in the greenhouse at one time which did well but everything has now been chucked out into the open.
There is a new book going to be published about them in the summer and I have some seed waiting to be sown later on. Maybe there will be more interest these lovely plants.

susan
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 16, 2007, 10:57:53 PM
That's a really nice species Susan, lovely markings. I have some seedlings so looking forward to flowers. I find many are best among lowish shrubby things, like verbascums, in order to be supported. Otherwise they flop about. C. palmeri is a delicious pink but so tall and skinny it's impossible to place without support from something.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 16, 2007, 11:13:20 PM
I said yesterday (over on the wildlife thread) that I would post some pictures from my recent visits to Lund and Copenhagen botanic gardens. Obviously with a visit in early July, many of the 'proper' alpines and woodland plants are over in these lowland gardens, but the following nearly qualify (all from Lund botanic garden, southern Sweden):

Morina longifolia - a tall plant of around 80-100cm, more suited for the herbaceous border and with leaves that look very similar to a thistle at first glance.
Acanthus mollis - similar size, softer leaves.
Agapanthus campanulatus group - they had clustered about 30 -40 large pots of this 1m tall bulb(?) in a group about 4m across, looked absolutely stunning
Two examples of what to do with your peat blocks. Those of us who were at the discussion weekend last year were shown various constructions with swedish peat blocks, none of which were used for bedding plants that I can recall.

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 16, 2007, 11:22:26 PM
More from Lund Botanic garden:

The Agapanthus display
Begonia foliosa var miniata - this won't be hardy, but they had a massive 2m tall specimen in a huge tub outside the greenhouses.
A rather nice Trycyrtis sp which didn't seem to have a label an one that I'm not familiar with.
Allium, again, I don't know the species, but they were naturalised in an area of long grass.

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 16, 2007, 11:28:44 PM
Thanks Peter. But it does seem like a terrible waste of peat blocks when I have cassiopes, phyllodaces, primulas and a hundred others BEGGING for such an environment - which I can't supply  :'(
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 16, 2007, 11:31:18 PM
They have acres of the stuff; easy come, easy go....
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 16, 2007, 11:50:34 PM
And now some from Copenhagen Botanic garden:

Peat/Rhododendron bed - they don't seem to have a rock garden as such, although if I read the signs correctly at the entrance this was where it should be. It must have been magnificent in late May/early June.
Primula florindae to show the variation in colour.
Lilium candense.

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 16, 2007, 11:59:26 PM
A final selection from Copenhagen, and we're wandering further away from rock garden plants I'm afraid.

Actaea rubra ssp arguta
Some Nymphaeas from the lily pond (unnamed varietes).

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: fermi de Sousa on July 17, 2007, 07:51:46 AM
Hi Peter,
the allium at Lund BG looks like it could be A. sphaerocephalum which is grown widely.
cheers
fermi
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 17, 2007, 09:53:23 AM
Thanks for an interesting thread Peter.  I grow Morina longifolia, could someone tell me how to distinguish it from Morina persica please?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: hadacekf on July 17, 2007, 07:44:03 PM
In spite of the tropical temperatures ( 38° C in shade and 47° C in sun) flower some plants marvellously. I am afraid, that not all my alpine plants will survive this heat. During this heat one cannot do anything in garden - only bacon with eggs roast at the flat stones in the rock-garden.

Talinum brevifolium
Talinum calycinum
Oxalis depressa 
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: David Nicholson on July 17, 2007, 07:49:18 PM
Franz, I will trade you some rain for some of your sunshine. It appears that we shall not be having a Summer in England this year :(
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 17, 2007, 09:19:14 PM
Re the photos from Lund BG.

Fermi, thanks for the i.d. I enjoy many of the alliums in passing, but never really pay that much attention to them in detail (such as the species name!), so as this wasn't labelled it's nice to have a name to go with the photos.

Brian, many apologies; the plant in the picture is Morina longifolia. On reviewing my notes taken at the time I see that I got the name right then, I can only plead tiredness, posting the pictures late at night is not good for accuracy! I 'googled' the two species, and came up with the impression that M. persica looks very similar to M. longifolia, perhaps with paler pink in the flowers. Closer examination of the picture son the web, however, shows that the flowers of M. persica give the impression of one upright petal and third 'falls' - to borrow a term from the Iris world. The flowers are also more outward facing than M. longifolia (see: http://www.stridvall.se/flowers/gallery/Familiae_variae_1/337_22). In terms of distribution, M. persica seems to be a Grecian/Turkish/Middle eastern to Pakistan species, while M.longifolia is found in the Himalaya.

I will now go back and change the name of the picture (I have double-checked the others, they are correct).

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 17, 2007, 09:22:27 PM
It seems that I can change the text, but not the name of the picture without re-posting it. Oh well, I'm sure people will know the proper name after this.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 17, 2007, 10:49:41 PM
Thanks for the link re Morina persica Peter.  It confirms that the plant I have bought (when it wasn't in flower) is in fact M.longifolia, no wonder I could see no difference to that which was in the garden.  I will continue to look for a valid M.persica. 

It took me several months to find the M.longifolia some years ago, eventually it was purchased at great expense and put in the garden.  I turned my back for a couple of days only to find out that the other half had "weeded the thistle out of the border!"  When I came across a plant labelled M.persica a few weeks ago I was delighted and pounced on that only to be perplexed when it flowered...now I know why!

The moral of this tale always escapes me as I never know when I might come across another plant again ::)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 17, 2007, 10:58:10 PM
I like your talinums Franz, much nicer than the tiny one I have, T. okanagonense, which grows to about 3cms across by 1cm high, has very small whiteish flowers then dies down for about 8 months. I don't know why I bother!

That lovely Lilium canadense. Such a graceful and elegant plant with long curving pedicels like those of Galanthus `Magnet.' The red form is even better I think.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Carlo on July 17, 2007, 11:11:41 PM
Ohhhhh, Lesley...

T. okanoganense is one of the BEST!

AND for those interested in nomenclatural issues, please see:  http://spectre.nmsu.edu/dept/docs/rsh/20.PDF

many of our Talinums are actually Phemeranthus.

Carlo
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 17, 2007, 11:33:11 PM
Ohhhhh, Lesley...

T. okanoganense is one of the BEST!
Carlo

Mine must have an extreme inferiority complex then ::)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: gmoen on July 18, 2007, 10:24:52 AM
A weekend in the Jotunheimen Mts.

I just spent a weekend in these mountains and here are some pictures.
(if someone would like some fresh collected seeds of the Pulsatilla below, please send me a PM or mail)

Magnar
Long time no see. Nice pictures, I believe it is my turn to go up north and pay YOU a visit now. And one more thing, could you please support me with some seeds of Centaurea bagadensis if it`s possilbe (I think I get some spare seeds of Lilium souliei if you are interested). Say hello to Toril from us  :D

So back to Jotunheimen:

1. Lake in the mountains
2. Cassiope hypnoides and Salix herbacea
3. Salix reticulata
4. Viscaria alpina syn. Lychnis alpina
5. Campanula latifolia
6. Pulsatilla vernalis (older flower in the corner)
7. Campanula latifolia (low form that can be found up on the peaks)

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paul T on July 18, 2007, 01:13:50 PM
WONDERFUL pics everyone.  Some abolute treasures in this thread, at least from my point of view.  A lot of things I've never heard of before too!!  ;D

Too many to mention too many specifics...... the Dianthus 'Elisabethan' stood out, plus that Loasa (I think?.... the one with the nasty hairs) was just amazing.

THANK YOU everyone!!  A real joy.  I have a few things flowering here in the middle of our winter now, but these are all a real treat.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Peter Maguire on July 18, 2007, 03:46:53 PM
Brian,

If your other half weeds out your M longifolia again, you could grow it cheaply from seed. If you want to increase your stocks I will probably have some seed on my plants (grown from SRGC seed many years ago and assiduously protected from the chief thistle remover/weeder and pruner in the house  ;D), just let me know.

Peter
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 18, 2007, 05:15:12 PM
gmoen wrote: Magnar
Long time no see. Nice pictures, I believe it is my turn to go up north and pay YOU a visit now. And one more thing, could you please support me with some seeds of Centaurea bagadensis if it`s possilbe (I think I get some spare seeds of Lilium souliei if you are interested). Say hello to Toril from us 


Of course, Geir, you will get seeds when they are ready. And I would very much like the L. souliei seeds. You will always be welcome here  :)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: hadacekf on July 18, 2007, 09:17:49 PM
Lesley and Carlo,
I like the Talinum okanagonense  also very much.
Thanks for the nomenclatural issues.
Talinum okanagonense 
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 18, 2007, 10:18:05 PM
Thanks for the lovely Talinum pics. I had T. okanoganenese for some years, but it disappeared when we had a winter with poor snow cover. Will have to get some plants again.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Magnar on July 18, 2007, 10:31:22 PM
Blooming today:

(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/silene_maritima_robin_white_135.jpg)
Silene maritima Robin Whitebreast


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/echium_amoenum_922.jpg)
Echium amoenum


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/delphinium_forrestii_coll_s_453.jpg)
Delphinium forrestii coll Sichuan


(http://www.lysthaven.dk/forum/files/perezia_recurvata_934.jpg)
Perezia recurvata
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 18, 2007, 10:38:05 PM
Thanks for your kind offer Peter but the other half has been banned from weeding ever since!   ;D
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 18, 2007, 11:00:53 PM
THanks for the image of the little white Talinum Franz. Yes, it's very nice indeed and while mine seems to be true, I can only conclude that it's a poor form or perhaps I'm not growing it well. I'll move it to a sunny raised bed and see what happens.

The gorgeous Perezia recurvata obviously likes life in North Norway :)I no longer have it (who in NZ still does?) but I only ever had a few flowers at a time and they had a white centre, rather than that all over, limpid, lovely blue.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paddy Tobin on July 18, 2007, 11:27:33 PM
Brian,

As Peter intimitated, Morina longifolia is one of those plants which can be unreasonably expensive as they can be raised very easily from seed and the seed is produced freely.

Let me know if I should save some from you - you could develop a thistly meadow.

Paddy
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: gote on July 19, 2007, 08:37:30 AM
Re Peter's Tricyrtis from Lund.
It is the only Tricyrtis I have tried that survives here. It even sows itself occasionally. Probably it does that in Lund also and probably that is the reason for the lack of label.
I have had it from seed from RHS for at least thirty years but i have lost the name.
Can anybody please identify it for me
Thanks
Göte
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 19, 2007, 09:33:23 AM
Thankyou Paddy,
I have got Morina longifolia in the garden now and have grown it from seed for plant sales etc.  I would really like a Morina persica - hence my disappointment to find that I had yet another M.longifolia.  Should you have seeds of M.persica you could have a friend for life ;)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paddy Tobin on July 19, 2007, 07:09:50 PM
As with you, Brian,

I have found Morina persica elusive; have tried seed several times only to germinate M. longifolia. No doubt, it will come along at some time.

Paddy
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 19, 2007, 10:17:08 PM
Well Paddy I think we will just have to keep our fingers crossed!  Presumably the seed problem is because of crossing with longifolia. :-\
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 20, 2007, 12:01:45 AM
I had the true M. persica back in the mid nineties, from a few seeds collected in Greece. Alas, I no longer have it.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Mick McLoughlin on July 22, 2007, 12:08:52 AM
Raining all day today here, so a couple of flowers from the greenhouse today.
First is Cyclamen hederifolium. One of the plants I got for 50p earlier this year, obviously confused about flowering time?
Second is Tulbagghia violacea pallida, been two winters outside. Put in a pot 2 months ago to see if worth entering in a show.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 22, 2007, 09:40:15 PM
A little quiet on the 'FLOWERING NOW' pages, so I shall gingerly (they ARE NOT alpines unfortunately), contribute a few images captured at a local garden (Vicarage Gardens at Carrington) and in my own front garden over the past couple of days. My dear wife took me shopping (arm forced gently up my back) to The Trafford Centre in Manchester and my treat for enduring this torture was a brief visit to the lovely Vicarage G'dns on the way home.

Probably more than one posting so I shall continue until my finger drops dead with fatigue.....

Still raining (though the sun did shine during the afternoon)...
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 22, 2007, 09:43:27 PM
....Some may be a tad 'arty', but I think they work....
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 22, 2007, 09:45:15 PM
....Last batch....finger in cold water....
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: ranunculus on July 22, 2007, 09:50:10 PM
My apologies!  After reviewing some of the images it seems that I have overdone the 'save at reduced quality' a little.....
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 22, 2007, 09:53:22 PM
Quote
My apologies!  After reviewing some of the images it seems that I have overdone the 'save at reduced quality' a little.....
They're looking good on my screen, Cliff, never fear.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 22, 2007, 11:14:57 PM
They look fine to me too, thanks Cliff. Maybe not alpine but wonderfully colourful and I can use some of that as our hard frosts continue. That no 2 in the third posting reminds me strongly of something I had 10 or 12 years ago as ? `Rustic Dwarfs.' They were big, sunflower-type flowers on shortish sturdy stems and all in amazing shades of coffee, cocoa, mahogany, anything brown you can imagine. I loved them dearly but where are they now? :-\

Our overseas news is showing yet more dreadful flooding in parts of the UK. I do truly feel for you and hope things improve very soon.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 23, 2007, 09:51:29 AM
Lesley,
Sadly the Rudbeckia hirta "Rustic Dwarf' series are half hardy annuals.  They are spectacular but that could explain why they have gone the way of all flesh!
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 23, 2007, 05:22:13 PM
A few flowers from the garden, thankfully we have not been subject to the floods that are still affecting other parts of the country.  How those poor people feel who have been flooded three times in as many weeks I cannot envisage.

Alstroemeria psittacina
Astrantia - one of many seedlings
Berkeya purpurea and close up
Bulbinella hookeri and close up
Bupleurum bronze form
Dicentra torulosa
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 23, 2007, 05:26:28 PM
I rather like Dierama so here are a few, the igneum is a short form which is particularly nice.
Dierama igneum
Dierama Blackbird
Dierama Lancelot
I think the flower form of this lathyrus is beautiful
Lathyrus belinensis
Leonotis leonurus flowering quite late for us this year
Linnaeus's marigold
Morina longifolia  the one that was bought as persica!!
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 23, 2007, 05:31:09 PM
lastly today
Scutellaria hubrechtii
Stylidium Little Sapphire - you can just see the triggers on the flower which give it it's common name
Zigadenus elegans, slowly clumping up

and two I was knocked over by at East Ruston Old Vicarage a couple of weeks ago
Puya alpestris an extraordinary coloured flower
and lastly is this a Watsonia?  It has bulbils up the stem, it wasn't labelled and the closest thing I could see in flower at the time was a Watsonia.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paddy Tobin on July 23, 2007, 10:34:58 PM
Brian,

A great selection of photographs. Many thanks.

Like yourself, I like dieramas very much though they can become very weedy, especially when planted in gravel I find. Have you tried Silverhill Seeds for dierama and all other South African bulbs - great selection of wild collected seed available by mail order.

Your last photographs certainly looks like a watsonis cultivar, in a very nice salmon colour, very desirable. However, I have never noticed any bulbils on the stems of watsonias. I wonder if by any chance you were noticing the seed pods?

That lathyrus above is certainly a very special bloom, lovely veining on the petals. The Berkeya purpurea is another fabulous plant.

I really must get the camera out and take a few photographs. After being away for a while I have been in the garden dawn(well, early in the morning) till dusk and haven't taken the time for photography.

By the way, what camera are you using? The photograph from yesterday, a damselfly was it?, had great clarity and detail. Excellently shot.

Paddy
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 23, 2007, 11:17:30 PM
Thanks for your comments Paddy and I'll certainly investigate Silverhill seeds...I also am very fond of Eucomis!  As to the Watsonia ???  they were small bulblets (just like mini onions with a brown coat) at the junction of the stem and the leaf as I remember.  I thought it was about time I put something else on the site and I got the camera out to get the battery charged so diverted round the garden ;D
Sorry not my photo of a damselfly and I wasn't too happy with the photos as the wind was not helpful - for example the Albuca shawii in the garden refused to stay still to be photographed!  The camera I do use is a Canon Ixus 700 no longer available as they are up to the Ixus 950.  It's a "press here dummy" camera but with the ability to manage the settings manually.  It's also a nice weight and comfortable to hold - two of the most important factors with a non SLR I think.  Comparing the photos with the Canon EOS SLR (other half) is embarassing but I just about hold my own!
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paddy Tobin on July 23, 2007, 11:27:33 PM
Many thanks, Brian.

Sorry about the mix-up re photograph of damsel fly - late at night now after a long day's slog in the garden. The people of Silverhills Seeds, can't recall the names at present, are coming to talk in Cork in September or October.

The Canon - well, I can dream!

Paddy
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 24, 2007, 12:10:58 AM
A great selection Brian as Paddy says. Yes, it IS a Watsonia and some species DO make bulbils on their stems. Beware of them as they spread widely and quickly. Maybe your winters would keep them in check. Those species (and I can't name them) are prohibited plants in NZ.

I found some of my `Rustic Dwarfs' lasted a second and even third year, depending, I suppose, on severity of the winter but yes, they were certainly short-lived. I had a bit of seed too but usually on the yellower forms rather than the best browns.

Is the pea perennial? The yellows are usually annual. 
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: rob krejzl on July 24, 2007, 12:30:34 AM
Lesley,

Didn't know that the prohibition extended to speech. Your quarantine is waaay stricter than ours.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on July 24, 2007, 04:24:55 AM
One up to you Rob. I am UNABLE (not MAY NOT) to name them ;D
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: fermi de Sousa on July 24, 2007, 05:02:21 AM
I'm sure that one of the Watsonias which dare not speak their names would be W. bulbifera
cheers
fermi
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paul T on July 24, 2007, 11:58:32 AM
Brian,

Fantastic photos!!!  Is that Bulbinella as orange as in the photo?  I'm only familiar with the yellow ones (B. nutans?) which I just adore here even if they do seed around a little too healthily at times, and the pale pink cauda-fellis (from memory) which I lost one year.  An orange one sounds delightful.  I must look up Puya too, as I love black flowers.  Rather interesting pic to put it mildly.  Great to see so many other things you're growing that I have here in my garden too..... many months from now!! <grin>  So strange to see you with your summer flowering stuff now while I have Galanthus and Eranthis flowering!!  :o
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 24, 2007, 07:32:52 PM
"The Silverhills Seeds people" are Rod and Rachel Saunders, Paddy. Charming folk and interesting speakers, we had the pleasure of some talks in Scotland a year or two ago.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 24, 2007, 10:50:10 PM
Yes Lesley the sweet pea is an annual,  I think it one of the best but only a little one!  We saw it at Sylvia Norton's (National Collection of Lathyrus) and it was about two foot tall.  Mine has reached the dizzy heights of 16" I think in a better year - mine got off to a bad start - it can reach four foot, but what a belter!!

Thanks to both Lesley and Fermi, the Watsonia will, I am sure be kept in check by the weather - especially at the moment.

Paul it is as orange as it looks, I keep it going in the cold greenhouse over the winter and plant it out for the summer.  This year I decided to put a couple of plants together in a pot and am very pleased with the result.  It was difficult to get the colour right for the puya, the descriptions we gave it ranged from kingfisher to petrol blue ... and I would be more than happy to have Galanthus flowering now ::)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Carlo on July 24, 2007, 11:19:33 PM
Brian,

Love that pea! Where'd you find your seed? (L. belinensis)

Carlo
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Brian Ellis on July 25, 2007, 09:48:17 AM
I had two sources of the seed - Sylvia Norton the National Collection Holder has limited amounts, and John & Brenda Foster.  I hope to have a few seed this year and will bulk up for next.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 25, 2007, 11:39:50 AM
Roger Parsons Sweet Peas is a source for Lathyrus belinensis

http://www.rpsweetpeas.co.uk/OtherLaths.htm

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 26, 2007, 12:01:38 PM
Here are some current pictures from Sweden

Onopordum messeniacum with a very limited distribution in southern Greece, flowering the second year from seed obtained from the Gothenburg Botanic Garden.


It has very spiny stems and the leaves are rather narow and spiny as well. It has a slender shape and doesn't take up as much room as many of the other species.


Salvia staminea, which is a trustworthy perennial, collected in Cappadocia in 2003


Antirrhinum nuttallianum ssp nuttallianum from California


and last pictures show the first flower of Azorina vidalii, which is from a plant raised from seed in 2005




Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Rob on July 28, 2007, 06:26:40 PM
Some photos from the garden today

I have retouched the water lily to make it a slightly darker yellow than it is in real life.

The cyclamen is one I got last year which lives in a raised bed and is meant to be hardy. Cyclamen hederifolium is also starting to flower in the same raised bed.

The tricyrtis hirta is in a pot on the patio, but the one in the garden has loads of buds and will open in the next day or two
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: David Nicholson on July 28, 2007, 06:32:37 PM
I've still got Cowslips flowering like mad, I'm sure they think it's March. ???
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: gmoen on July 29, 2007, 01:33:47 PM
Hi folks

Not so many plants in flower in the garden at the moment, but I took a few pictures to day:

1 Erodium chrysanthum
2 Zauschneria garrettii
3 Zigadenus elegans
4 Gentiana tibetica
5 Cremanthodium sp. From Szechuan, China.....any ideas???
6 Close up of Cremanthodium sp.
7 And finally, I have built a new "spot" in the garden from limestone. Mostly for Primulas..... (Yes, the uggly labels will be gone soon.....ha ha)
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on July 29, 2007, 01:38:38 PM
Geir that's a great looking rockery except for the white labels. Would you like a packet of black ones?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: gmoen on July 29, 2007, 02:03:20 PM
No thanks Mark, I've got hundreds of them just have to write the names.... :-\

Did you get the Pulsatilla seeds yet ??
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on July 29, 2007, 02:32:54 PM
no seeds yet. I need to shift up a gear and get all my promises in to the post
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: johanneshoeller on July 29, 2007, 05:46:33 PM
Some photos from the weekend

Epipactis helleborine
Cyp. calceolus - damages / hail
Gentiana ?
Gentiana farreri? (seed from China)
Gentiana ?
Cyclamen eur.

Hans

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Susan Band on July 29, 2007, 06:21:16 PM
Geir, lovely cremanthodium, don't know what it is though.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 29, 2007, 11:12:10 PM
Re that lovely, feathery Cremanthodium:
 I thought at first it might be C. brunneopilosum, but I think the leaves are too thin and small in Geir's plant for it to be this species.
See the AGS Bullletin, China Special, Volume 70 September 2002, pages 318- 320 for notes on Cremanthodium and Ligularia from China, by Hilary and John Birks.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: arisaema on July 29, 2007, 11:47:59 PM
Cremanthodium lineare is another possibility, you could try keying it (http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/mss/volume21/Asteraceae-AGH-Senecioneae-part1_coauthoring.htm). It's a really nice plant!
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Rob on July 30, 2007, 10:16:41 PM
I tried to get a honey bee in the photo visiting this passion flower, but it was too quick and had moved to the next flower by the time I pressed the shutter.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: PaulM on July 31, 2007, 08:59:11 PM
I'm glad you missed the bumble bee as it would have blocked some of the view of your exquisitly beautiful passion fruit flower. The only species I am growing here in the frigid north is Passiflora lutea, which has survived several winters, but still hasn't been able to build up the strength to flower.

Azorina vidalii is in full splendor now, and this will be my last post for July. It is a tender perennial, which is very frost sensitive, and it has to be taken indoors in the fall, but works well as a house plant too, with its glossy green leaves.

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 31, 2007, 09:06:03 PM
It is the waxy surface of the flowers of the Azorina that I find as lovely as the shiny leaves...I love flowers of substance like this!
Plus the interior is like a Codonopsis, or even the passion flower! It is not a very long-lived plant, I thought, though preennial... is it so with you, Paul?
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on July 31, 2007, 09:16:08 PM
Here are some pics taken this morning

  1. Viola spathulata - from the Elburs Mountains, Iran - flowering nearly
      from April to November
  2. Viola aetolica - more or less monocarp
  3. Viola albanica - from Northern Greece, growing on serpentine there
  4. and 5. Scilla scilloides - just opening
  6. Bellis rotundifolia from Morocco - selfseeding here since 1995
  7. Another 'blue' flower - Nymphaea capensis 'King of the Blues'
      - rather disappointing
  8. Cyclamen ponticum - better than C. purpurascens when grown in
      a pot, although hardy outside
  9. Cyclamen hederifolium, the first flower
10. Gentiana asclepiadea - of Turkish origin ?

Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Germany
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Maggi Young on July 31, 2007, 09:24:37 PM
All Violas are charming but the colouring and neat habit of V. spathulata rank it very high in my esteem. It is  looking very healthy and happy for you Gerd, you are lucky to have such a plant.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on August 02, 2007, 07:33:37 AM
Thank you Maggi,
In my opinion Viola spathulata is one of the best recent introductions and it really deserves further distribution. It is easy when potgrown or in a trough with a cover against rain.
Unfortunately it does not build seeds cleistogamously in the way of a lot of the other violets. I tried to handpollinate the flowers - but no success.
So far, the only way of propagation was to root cuttings from side shoots.

Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Germany
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Paul T on August 05, 2007, 06:23:37 AM
Gerd,

That V. spathulata certainly is something isn't it!!??  It has very similar flowers by the look of it to the mauve forms of our native V. hederaceae but a compact non-spreading habit to it that is just delightful.  Definitely a treasure to have in your collection.

Great pics everyone.  Thanks.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 05, 2007, 11:22:12 PM
Gerd could your Bellis rotundifolia be the same as my Bellis caerulea? Tall wirey stems above spoon shaped leaves

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 05, 2007, 11:29:37 PM
I am sooo behind with my photos caused by idleness, swifts and bat survey reports. Maggi I might be at the weekend after all. I got a good payer today.

Annuals in the garden
Agapanthus in the wrong place but doing great - no sun until after 3.30pm
A tiny Hypericum
Leucojum autumnale
two limestone troughs


Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 05, 2007, 11:34:00 PM
Campanula tommasinianus
Primula

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 05, 2007, 11:43:44 PM
Just found this on the bellis but mine are blue and have 17cm stems

BELLIS ROTUNDIFOLIA 'CAERULESCENS'
Delicate pale (horticultural) pink, daisy flowers Apr-Jul and later, 10cm

Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 05, 2007, 11:50:45 PM
Just realised I put all my stuff in the wrong month but it'll be OK here anyway
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Lesley Cox on August 06, 2007, 01:30:15 AM
Mark, I don't grow many annuals at all but I do like your arrangement where they are mixed and apparently randomly planted. So much more attractive than lined out or one kind massed.
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on August 06, 2007, 06:38:14 AM
Mark,
Assumed the flowers of your Bellis are 'caerulescens' which means bluish, I think you cultivate the same species like I do. Leaves and stems are just the same.

Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Germany
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: mark smyth on August 06, 2007, 08:15:43 AM
Gerd I will rename my plants this morning. One difference is mine doesnt self sow. In the three years I have had it I've only got two seedlings.

Lesley, the bed with all the yellow Nemesia was supposed to be only Nemesia but when our drought came thay suffered badly and looked like they would die. I then planted some Arctotis, bedding geraniums (oh I hate the word) Pelargoniums and Argyranthemums. The rain came, never went away and the overall look is great. The blue leaves ferny plant at the bottom of annuals2 is Argyranthemum 'Royal Haze'
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Rafa on August 20, 2007, 12:00:07 PM
Hello,

Beautiful pics!! Gerd, very nice violas!

Here Cypella coelestis
Title: Re: Flowering now July 2007
Post by: Gerdk on August 20, 2007, 12:40:03 PM
Thank you Rafa, the same for your Cypella.
Gerd
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