By special request (part 3)

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Following from part 2 which was getting long,

http://davesgarden.com/forums/t/694448/

I thought you all might like another of those sweet little violas, this one I took 6 days, ago in the rose bed just starting to flower. It looks to have bronze foliage, I had Viola labradorica which has purplish foliage in the same bed, some still grows but I'm trying to get rid of it, it spreads too easily and chokes everything else. This flower has the small form of heartsease, with some gorgeous colouring!

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Whidbey Island, WA(Zone 7a)

As usual, I'm trying to catch up - how do I get so far behind on all my favorite threads?

Anyway, lovely, lovely photos of the flowers (adore the viola above), and marvelous images of your ducks!!!

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Thanks Murmur, it is difficult to keep up with everything, and garden too!

It was a lovely day yesterday, I managed to clean up the fuchsia bed by the wall. Then I had to go around with my camera, even though I was worm out!

As the sun was getting low it shone beautifully through some of the primroses. With dappled shade interspersed with the glowing colours who could resist!

This is one of the few I grew from seed, the colours are more washed although it can't be seen very well, with more yellow flooding into the petals. This one has tended to look more tatty, it may be because it hasn't the same cover as the others. All of a sudden, just when I think they will be past their best, there is a new flush of flowers on all of them, they just don't know when to stop! The flowers on this are huge.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

This one seems to be the most floriferous of the others, but I measured them today and this as well as a some others are near a foot across the flowers, but different forms.

Taken last night, still going strong and no dead heading needed! The new flowers must be covering the old.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

These are the old type of Polyanthus, which I think have given mine their vigour, I guess they can cross with others of the same family.. Some have disappeared with dry summers, but they have set seed. They glowed so beautifully with the evening sun filtering through their petals.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Closer

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

A paler shade

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Himrod, NY(Zone 6a)

Wallaby, what wonderful pictures and the colors of the first 2 posts today are breathtaking!! I have been following your thread and have truly enjoyed it. Had to empty my greenhouse today with almost a week of unseasonably cold weather here. Seems easier than hoping I don't run out of gas when not at home. Your garden is a quiet place in my life right now. Thank you.......

Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

Oh, Janet, your primroses are glorious! Will you be saving seed? Sounds like they just keep on blooming as long as it is cool. My tough little old fashioned ones are wonderful now. I'm itching to get my hands on some hardy blue ones. Someone was offering pink and blue doubles last year that sounded like they would grow here, but while I was trying to find them I came across this beauty. Janet, I saw this and it had your name written all over it, lol.

http://www.gardencrossings.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/plants.plantDetail/plant_id/741/index.htm

Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

and then I came across this..

http://forestfarm.com/search/closeup.asp?PlantID=prgr044

For that matter, they offer so many wonderful varieties!

http://forestfarm.com/search/plant.asp?code=2&use=n&genus=Primula

This message was edited Apr 5, 2007 6:18 PM

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Thanks Joyous. Have you had to put your plants in the house? We have had some very cold weather, now it's warm, yes, actually warm!

Today was really lovely, 17C (63f) or perhaps more, but i was too tired to enjoy it, plus I had to go shopping! Must get a good night's sleep as the next 3 days at least are going to be the same. A big change from the 5C we had last week!

Neal I think they will make seed, and I will definitely be looking for some, so you will be first in line. I found a pic of the plants last year when they were still young, hardly a flower on them. They started to flower in January this year!

I have often thought of trying the doubles, they are usually expensive and I have had my doubts as to whether they would live for long, as most hybrids don't do well. There is a really deep blue I would love to try.

I had to put a tape measure to some of the plants! Now you can see how big they really are!

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Himrod, NY(Zone 6a)

Yes, everything except for a palm is in the house in front of windows or under grow lights. It will only be about a week but it sure was nice to go out to the greenhouse and play! DH raked the yard in the snow today, that is not for me!

The above primrose are from seeds you developed????? WOW

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Another

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Oh snow, we usually get some at Easter but this year it's warm!

Yes, these were from a few seed I got from a Primula x bulleesiana, a candelabra with smallish yellow tinted with bronze flowers! The bees did the job for me, the plant died but it was a bought one.

This one is a lower mound, but still a foot across!

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

The bright red one is the colour of a Polyanthus I have, it does return every year but is never a huge plant.

This is a flower on the first one I posted today, the yellow washed colour on that probably came from the parent, but this flower is 2.75" across!

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Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

It should be introduced as "Janet's Jurassic strain"!

somewhere, PA

OMG! I've never seen such huge blooms on a primula! I think Neal's nailed
that name. LOL

Tam

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

It does seem that I have a few of my own strains in this garden, Aquilegia, and Tradescantia, I had a double on a deep blue one last year, hoping it returns this year. I also had a self set Tradescantia in a pot which had white flushed with blue flowers.

The Anemone blanda on the bank were looking great yesterday, a couple of bare patches where the moles insist on digging them up. They have so many self sets I will need to thin them, but that would have to be done in the spring when in growth as I wouldn't find them. I hope to get the camellias in the ground this year in front of the house on the west side, then I will plant A blanda around them.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

I took another of the N Thalia yesterday, they looked so lovely in the dappled shade. This is 3 of the original 10 which have increased over a few years.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Pulmonaria Majeste is in flower too, it's in the bed under the tree. The leaves are all silver and lance shaped.

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Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

Janet, do you grow Mertensia virginica?

http://davesgarden.com/pf/showimage/38080/

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Not yet Neal, I almost added it to an order in the autumn but decided to leave it, can't have everything! I do like it though!

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

I have a lovely blue flowering Omphallodes which started as 'Starry Eyes', the original plant died but it set seed. I had tried to grow the seed I collected but it preferred to grow naturally. The flowers now don't have the pronounced white star, but it is slowly increasing along the edge of the hosta bed, one has set in the hosta bed.

They are so pretty, but the camera just won't pick up the depth of blue, it's not a deep blue but much stronger than I can show. One day I will trick the camera and get it! They have a stage with a purple hue.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

My little lot of Tulip praestans Unicum along the top of the red lily bed glow in the sun, and being at the top of a bank I get a great view of them!

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

This tulip has been by the south wall for a few years, my daughter gave me two and this one seems to have increased to three. It disappeared for a while, but now flowers every year. It probably gets a little food when I water the fuchsias.

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Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

Omphallodes is new to me, and breathtaking! The Virginia Bluebells made me think of you -just seem to be something you would like and would be appropriate in your garden. Anyhow, I missed the seed formation last year (they go dormant quick as a flash when they are done, and totally disappear), but I'll pay extra close attention this year. I want to wintersow and increase what I've got anyway, but I'll certainly try to get seed for you. They are just budding now. I saw some self set seedlings last year and am keeping my eyes open for them now too (I don't know how long it takes them to bloom from seed).

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Omphallodes are sweet, and breathtaking! They also do well in dry shade.

Yes the Virginia Bluebells I have had my eye on for some time, I'm sure I could find space for them! Some seeds do come and go very quickly, and with everything happening in summer it's easy to forget. I haven't noticed seed on the Omphallodes since it first made it, but I was watching them then, they must make seed as they keep setting around. These seem to grow and bloom fairly quickly.

I tried to get a pic of them, amongst the N Jetfire, some of those haven't grown well this year but I imagine Mr Mole has something to do with that.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

This I took last year on 14th June from an upstairs window, it shows most of the back garden in one swoop. It had turned very hot, much hotter than normal and the banana and hedychium got scorched.

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Winchester, KY(Zone 6a)

I LOVE both of those last shots! The first is spring perfection in a garden! The one from the upstairs window simply defines cottage garden, with your perfect veggie patch right there. Wonderful!

Those Mertensia will be in pots this year, so the seed will not escape me!

Ocean Springs, MS(Zone 8b)

Janet, love that picture of your Anemone's I hope mine end up just like that.

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

That veggie patch is due for it's clean up, and I still have loads of seed to sow, never ending but it keeps me on my toes!

The whole back garden was just grass with a narrow border and a couple of rhododendrons. I had to have some veggies, I used to grow all of my own but there's too much shade for some things, peas and onions don't do well.

I try to concentrate on the best value for space, sweet corn is a must but I only got a few plants last year. I only get one cob per plant, but they are something to look forward to, they have to be fresh and I don't like the supersweets. Even with a lot of shade they always produce,

Carrots, spring onions, I grow a variety called Ishikura, it doesn't bulb and keeps over winter. Parsnips I grow Gladiator, they do well usually and are great chipped or put in mashed potatao. I grow kidney beans behind the potatoes, and French beans, sometimes cauliflowers which I love, but the cabbage root fly can make that difficult.

Strawberries I keep a 3 year cycle so it moves up the garden, 2 new rows from runners each year. I have Blackcurrants, raspberries which stopped growing well with the dry summers, and Boysenberries which are heavenly but raspberry beetle thinks so too, and the blackbirds have become acrobats but I must feed the wildlife!

Behind the Delphiniums there is a Victoria plum tree which produces well, last year there were some moth maggots in some, and some butterflies and wasps enjoy them too, I get just a few to eat fresh, plenty for everyone!

Further back in front of the middle greenhouse there is an old Bramley apple tree, I don't make desserts and will use just a few, the birds are fed the rest in late winter. It had to be trimmed back a little because of the greenhouse, last year an apple blew into a roof glass pane and smashed it, I ask myself what is more important! Perhaps I should cut some more branches back.

I will be on the look out for Omphallodes seed!

Vi, I started with very few plants, I think I had around 15 which I started in pots of leaf compost in the autumn, I had to remove grass from that area and soed them in spring probably 7 or 8 years ago. They do self seed well if happy and fill in the spaces, they also flower from very young corms. I used to fill in the gaps with bush lobelia, deep blue and bright pink, but now the space is filled and other things cover it later, I like to concentrate on plants which look after themselves and don't need to be replaced! The Lily of the Valley is running into them, I hope it doesn't affect them but it does grow later.

I have a Pulsatilla vulgaris self set flowering, at the top of the bank behind the bath tub. The rest are close to flowering, I grew them from seed a few years ago, they fill in a gap with flowers then the ferny foliage stays until the autumn. I have a mixture of colours, some I grew from seed off them and placed in other beds mostly turned out red, they are so pretty.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

This one was on 2nd May last year, it was a late spring.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

This is one of the red ones I grew from the originals, I took seed from a ruby one and purple, had hundreds of seedlings but only a few survived. They were in trays and need to be in the ground from an early stage to develop their tap roots. I think even the ones from the purple ended up red!

I planted them where I could find space, some around the Acacia, a few in the dahlia bed. They do make a little colour before other things take over. This was on 6th May 06.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

The original mix was Pulsatilla vulgaris cut petal mixed, I got 9 plants, one of those is P. alba.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

I have a couple of deep purple ones, which along with the original ruby one have suffered from mole mines. They are very active on the banks where it keeps moist, eating my worms! As Pulsatilla have a deep root they do recover, but haven't managed to grow into big plants like some.

This one last year is one that nearly disappeared altogether, but the last two summers have been dry and they have had a chance to recover, 3 years ago I was pulliing my hair out over moles! Worms go deeper when it's dry, so do moles.

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

They make wonderful photographic subjects!

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Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

I think this was from P alba, it has very hairy foliage.

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Ocean Springs, MS(Zone 8b)

All of them are beautiful I don't know which I like the best.

Lincoln, United Kingdom(Zone 8a)

Hard to choose, I don't think we need to! This has prompted me to look for seed on them this year, they don't always make good seed but I just realised these would fill in nicely in the newest bed next to the water drain.

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Ocean Springs, MS(Zone 8b)

That is a great photo shot, very nice.

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