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Corydalis 2022

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Leena:
I didn't find Corydalis thread for this year, so if there was one, please remove this.
Corydalis malkensis in the first pictures has spread very nicely.
In the second picture a self sown Corydalis, maybe solida, a very dark form.

Maggi Young:
Ooh! That very dark corydalis is very nice!  I love that C. malkensis goes with every other plant around it.

Leena:
Thank you Maggi. :) It is so nice to have surprises from seedlings, and also this year there have been first time flowering C.malkensis seedlings outside this bed, so it is slowly spreading. I love it.

Gabriela:

--- Quote from: Leena on April 28, 2022, 01:20:17 PM ---I didn't find Corydalis thread for this year, so if there was one, please remove this.
Corydalis malkensis in the first pictures has spread very nicely.
In the second picture a self sown Corydalis, maybe solida, a very dark form.

--- End quote ---

I was just about to start one Leena, you beat me with resizing the pictures :)
Super nice dark C. solida!!!

They've been in flower here for a few weeks now; luckily it remains cold (too cold some days). All in all a good Corydalis season I would say.
C. solida first: general image, C. solida 'George Baker', a red one that I like even more and a surprise of this spring, which appeared among a purple clump.







Gabriela:
C. malkensis is a good grower indeed, some are from your seeds :) I have few clumps mixed with other Corydalis and they are very pretty as well.


C. paczoskii, a very delicate but tough species


Corydalis cava fo. alba, from your seeds; second year to flower so it looks a bit more grown-up.


C. cava ssp. marschalliana, first time flowering, I can imagine how more vigorous it will look in a few years. One can tell it is a tetraploid; mostly cream flowers, also light purple and white.


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