Delphinium andersonii has finally cracked through the soil. (Crook County, Oregon)
Carolyn Poff Strong
Zone 3 & 8
Comments
Re: Dephinium andersonii
Pretty little plant :) I am amazed to see all the different American Delphiniums! I want to grow more of the kind ;)
Re: Dephinium andersonii
Thanks, Mark. I have heard that delphiniums can be hard to ID, but since D. andersonii is the only one in this area ID'd in the plant atlas, I believe it is that. I would say it's about 18" at most. We have mostly deep blues, some shades into purple and a couple of whites. This is on our 60 acres in the middle of Oregon where I am at quite a bit. (Zone 3, at 4,000') I am moving rocks around on our hill for a dryland garden, but most the 'garden' is natural.
In Portland, (Zone 8-ish) I have a few troughs & raised beds. At my work location, I have use of the university's neglected rockery where I have some lewisia, penstemons, and other things.
Carolyn Poff Strong
Re: Delphinium andersonii
Great looking emerging leaves!
Those early spring beginnings, or bits of fresh looking overwintered seedlings etc, are among the most exciting plant spottings of the year :)
At least here, where even seeing bare ground (not yet!) is a thrill, and probably in dry interior Oregon too! I imagine Portland to have a much less spartan winter....
Carolyn, welcome to the NARGS Forum, glad you made the jump on over from Alpine-L. And a nice start with the delphinium species waking up, beautiful succulent red-lined leaves. How tall does this one get for you?
To get an idea about what to expect I looked it up on CalPhotos, looks most variable from near white to intense blues, and fairly short.
http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/cgi/img_query?where-genre=Plant&where-taxo...
You climate zone is listed as both 3 & 8, do you garden in two locations?