Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
General Subjects => Alpines => Topic started by: ruweiss on April 19, 2009, 08:49:30 PM
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The warm and sunny weather in the last time was irresistible for my Townsendias
which resulted in profuse flowering.
Townsendia spec. is from AGS seeds, similar to T. condensata and an absolute beauty.
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Townsendia spec. is from AGS seeds, similar to T. condensata and an absolute beauty.
I'm looking into the identity of this Townsendia, it may be T condensata, scapigera or spathulata? I am also researching couple of other Townsendias and I will post here when I get any results
Diane
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Diane Clement
Assistant Director
AGS Seed Exchange
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I have had a reply from the donor of the Townsendia sp. It was collected in Alberta, and it is probably Townsendia condensata. The donor says that the plant is growing exactly as it does in the wild, and is reliably biennial, so do save the seed!
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Seems a while since we discussed these cute daisies, so........
Here are three photos, of the Pryor Mountains form of Townsendia spathulata taken in the wild by Brian Welzenbach.
The photos were kindly passed to me by Graham Nicholls who got seed of this one from Brian. (and the 'Cottonballs' form recently featured in the International Rock Gardener : No. 5 May 2010 : http://www.srgc.org.uk/logs/index.php?log=international)
Great little plants and super photos: thanks to Brian Welzenbach! 8)
Townsendia spathulata Pryor Mtns form
[attach=1]
[attach=2]
[attach=3]
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these are all great!
love those fuzzy ones, and great to see a form from alberta.. would love to stumble on those! suspect it would be south and high!
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A superb plant, and a great little phlox there too. :D
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Wonderful photos thanks to Brian Welzenbach and to Maggi for showing them here. The close up shot is terrific and yes I agree "fuzzy" and "cute" - a real winner!
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Another townsendia, in the garden, label long lost. And another, probably T. montana.
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These little daisies are immensely photogenic, aren't they?
I'm making a summer resolution to remember to seek them out in this year's seed exchanges..... I keep forgetting how lovely they are and the ones we were growing in our "American" raised bed got eaten alive by assorted chomping pests and not replaced when the bed underwent a re-vamp some time ago..... :'(
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They're wonderfully easy to grow and what could be more charming than daisies underfoot? Unfortunately, they're not long-lived here in the northeast except for T. montana which also self-sows.
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I've have seedlings in one of my troughs but they have never flowered ???
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Very nice Townsendia's in this topic.
Also like this Townsendia hookeri ,even when not in flower.
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Oh no some more plants to fall in love with, there is something about daisys, they just remind me of little happy faces :) I remeber seeing one at the Aberdeen Show. Are they really hard to grow from seed?
Angie :)
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astragalus,
I noticed in the first two pictures you last posted, 01-08-2010, that they both have a phillips screw in the upper left hand corner. Is there any significance to the screw?
Rob
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Angie,
I've sown Townsendia parryi, T. rothrockii, T. alpigenia, T. excarpa and T. incana over the last couple of years and the only kind that I wasn't able to germinate was T. incana. All the others germinated in between 7 and 21 days @ 20C. I sowed them in a basic soil-less mix and transplanted them to a more free draining soil after they were big enough to do so. So all in all they were quite straight forward.
One of my T. alpigenia flowered this year but before I could collect the resulting seed it was harvested by a squirrel. I'm hoping to have better luck with the rest.
Regards,
Rob
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Easy from seed and follow this with good, gritty compost, very well drained. I've lost some because they're generally short lived, with me anyway, and not all have set seed but some do. Perfect trough plants for a sunny spot.
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Hi Rob
Sounds if it's worth trying, I am glad that they aren't to hard to germinate as I haven't had to much luck with seeds but saying this I am getting better.
They are so lovely. Everyone says that they are short lived, how long is short lived ?
Hope the squirrel leaves the rest of your seeds for you. I once put a bag over my seed pod thinking it was a good way to collect my seed but my dog must have thought there was a goodie in the bag and eat the bag and the seed pod :o...luckily he wasn't ill.
Lesley I like the word easy :)
Angie :)
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For me, short-lived meant died after flowering, so monocarpic, except exscarpa which regularly set seed, until I cooked it last summer. Have to start over.
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For me, short-lived meant died after flowering, so monocarpic, except exscarpa which regularly set seed, until I cooked it last summer. Have to start over.
Oh no Lesley I was hoping at least three to four years I would be devasted if I grew them from seed and then they die on me...one thing for sure mine won't get cooked here ;D
Angie :)
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I've have seedlings in one of my troughs but they have never flowered ???
Hi Mark, that's very funny that you noticed the phillip's head screw. Simple explanation - was making something which required them, had one leftover, and instead of putting it back in tool chest which was some 45 steps down at the bottom of the garden, "temporarily" placed it in hole in tufa. Obviously it got forgotten. My laziness has now been memorialized in photo, oops!