Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Quote from: ashley on May 11, 2010, 09:53:43 AMOver the years our family trips were regularly punctuated by a small voice from the back of the car: "More desolate wasteland!" Perhaps if they'd let you sit in the front Ashley?
Over the years our family trips were regularly punctuated by a small voice from the back of the car: "More desolate wasteland!"
If those are the Corydalis seedpods on the two shown, what are the flowers like?
The iris is my favourite too Tony, but then I would say that. I'd love to know what it is.If those are the Corydalis seedpods on the two shown, what are the flowers like? On the Holubec species the foliage looks to be exceptionally fine (as in good, but also as in compact and deeply dessected).Gerry has such good taste in flowers.
Thanks for that link Cohan. I'm afraid I don't have the Corydalis Bible. It came out at a time when I literally had no money at all except to pay the power bill and mortgage.The foliage is incredibly good I think and I like the flowers too but I keep wondering what is there about its habitat or evolution that makes it produce such extreme seed pods.
The wind-blown bladder theory sounds very probably. There is a link to Jan Jilek on the "Blue Corydalis" thread that could be useful. The only thing is, the more people who know about it, the less likely I am to get there in time. He starts his seedlist in July apparently. I've had seed from him in the past and had just about 100% germination (though haven't tried Corydalis).
Seed capsules being spread by the wind is correct, and Lidén and Zetterlund also say that the seeds do tolerate dry storage. The two species mentioned in the book grow in rough screes which aren't particularly easy to recreate in cultivation, but this species being a steppe plant should prove far more amenable...Jileks site has always been a little weird, here's the direct links to his seedlist, his bulblist and the Corydalis-gallery
Seed capsules being spread by the wind is correct, and Lidén and Zetterlund also say that the seeds do tolerate dry storage. The two species mentioned in the book grow in rough screes which aren't particularly easy to recreate in cultivation, but this species being a steppe plant should prove far more amenable...
I got mail from Zetterlund and he told it's not Corydalis and if you want the plant you should order seeds of Leontice incerta. So when I thought it was a Berberidaceae it wasn't wrong... /Stellan
Here are two pictures from yesterday from North Kazakhstan about 50 km West of Aktobe. I travel now in farming area so not so many plants./Stellan