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Author Topic: Can't beat P. vulgaris  (Read 1757 times)
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Hoy
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..Always Look on the Bright Side of Life...


« Reply #15 on: June 05, 2010, 11:05:50 AM »

Not the showy colors maybe, but a very fine plant when you find it! To hit the blooming you have to look when the carpet of snow disappear. This year I was a little too late but caught the last flowers of Pulsatilla vernalis (Mogop!).


* Pulsatilla vernalis.jpg (238.46 KB, 573x716 - viewed 97 times.)

* Pulsatilla vernalis2.JPG (301.24 KB, 768x688 - viewed 88 times.)
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Trond
Rogaland, Norway - with cool, often rainy summers  (29C max) and mild, often rainy winters (180 cm/year)!
Todd Boland
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« Reply #16 on: June 06, 2010, 04:14:27 PM »

If you get seed of this one Trond it would be most appreciated!  I have tried it twice and each time they ended up being P. vulgaris!
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Todd Boland
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Zone 5b
1800 mm precipitation per year
Hoy
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« Reply #17 on: June 07, 2010, 01:21:58 PM »

If you get seed of this one Trond it would be most appreciated!  I have tried it twice and each time they ended up being P. vulgaris!
Certainly! But you have to cross your fingers: Two years ago a hare ate all the flowers, last year a herd of sheep managed to get through the fence and ate all the seedheads (and a lot more - among them all the Gentiana purpurea in flower) and this year we have a bunch (or what do you say about this animal?) elk (moose) browsing around the place.
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Trond
Rogaland, Norway - with cool, often rainy summers  (29C max) and mild, often rainy winters (180 cm/year)!
cohan
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August, Columbia Icefield, Alberta


« Reply #18 on: March 09, 2011, 09:04:13 PM »

Nice plants!
Trond, I`d like to line up for seeds of vernalis also, if it doesn`t get eaten this year!

Here is one of my 2 beginning plants of P vulgaris, 2010; last year was their first spring after being planted in this bed (previous winter was still in the nursery pots sunk in the ground). I have to say I love to see the foliage poking up in spring--things in general are very slow to start here, and this bed turns out to be in a cool spot...oh well!

   

Ironically, when the flowers opened in mid-May, we were having some very warm dry weather, so the flowers opened wide ( I prefer them half open!)

 

A few days later, on a cooler day, they returned to form  Grin

   
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west central alberta, canada; just under 1000m; record temps:min -45C/-49F;max 34C/93F; http://picasaweb.google.ca/cactuscactus  http://urbanehillbillycanada.blogspot.com/
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