Seed Collectors / Dealers in Japan
Does anyone know of anyone in Japan that sells collected seed?
a forum to discuss dwarf woody plants
Does anyone know of anyone in Japan that sells collected seed?
I have many scented shrubs and some are really delicious!
The fragrance of both Osmanthus delavayi and Viburnum carlesii are easily detected all over the garden.
Sometimes it pays to be a lazy gardener:
I never would have found this had I pulled it out of an alpine trough when I should have...
A Thuja occidentalis seedling:
Too bizarre! Got this acouple of years ago and now its blooming! Salix gracilistylus 'Melanostachys'
This is a nice acquaintance - Rh pentaphyllum (I am not quite sure of that name). Anyway it tolerates hard frost and is better when the winter is dry and cold than when it is wet and mild.
Hello again: Guess Todd might help me with this topic as Newfoundland is Kalmia, as well as dwarf Willow, country. This is a shrub I have always admired and, yes, wanted to grow in my garden despite the fact that my soil is less than ideal for it. Guess I could buy a shrub but don't really like to give up on seeds until I've tried to get what I want that way. Well, this spring there are 6 pots with seeds planted over the last few years in my very cold, sunny back porch with nary a speck of green in them.
I was initiated into the wonderful world or native Hypericum species, many being rather ornamental small shrubby plants, some with attractive peeling back, by George Newman of Bedford, New Hampshire. These are first class shrubs that are somewhat neglected in horticulture, but should be grown more often. One of the very best is H. frondosum, and Eastern/Southeastern USA species, often seen in the cultivar 'Sunburst':
http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=HYFR
We were talking about fall fruiting Salix the other day; yesterday I went out into the area just beyond my acreage, on my uncle's farm; there is a large wetland area of grasses, sedges and mixed open brush/woodland (in every gradation and combination) which snakes its way in patches and stretches between more mesic mixed/coniferious woods..
On dry ground Betula nana forms low, creeping plants. Here with a lichen.