Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
Plant Identification => Plant Identification Questions and Answers => Topic started by: DaveM on June 27, 2020, 11:39:41 AM
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This Campanula has flowered better and better for the last 3 years and is thoroughly perennial. It was grown from Club seed as C. formanekiana, but the thoroughly perennial habit, bell shape and leaves are not right for that species. I have looked through the book on dwarf campanulas but still remain clueless. Would welcome any ideas.
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Hmmmm.... Have done some more digging and think I might possibly have a name for this. Seems to fit the description of Campanula sarmatica. This species is native to the Caucasus. Apparently can spread via underground stolons.
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Openly campanulate flowers and smart foliage make it rather a star, David!
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Hi Dave, could be. The habit looks a little different to the photos elsewhere on the web (e.g. the flower stems that start off horizontal, then go up). Missouri BG say that sarmatica is a taprooter. But it does look similar.
I don't have any better suggestions though, and I haven't grown C. sarmatica.
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Thanks Maggi and Tristan. I like it too. The leaf shape, leaf petiole length compared to leaf length, and flower form and hairyness around the mouth all point to C sarmatica, according to the description in Graham Nicholl's book. So, if it's not C sarmatica then I concluded that it's something pretty close. I'll forego checking the root structure until it has be to removed....... ;D