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Old 06-04-2004, 09:51 PM
Sacha
 
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Default Ranunculus ficaria 'Brazen Hussy'

TheGardener6/4/04 11:12

I have been e-mailed by a French student, who is making a dossier on
Ranunculus ficaria 'Brazen Hussy'. He wants to know if it is a naturally
occurring variation, and if so, where is it found, or whether it is a plant
which has been developed genetically and only available commercially.

Although I have the plant in my garden, I don't know the answer to the above
questions. Can anybody help?


I found this:
"The last, seen in the third photo, has off-white blooms & is called
"Crawshay Cream." It originated as a cross between a natural pure white
variant ("Albus") with normal green leaves, hybridized with the likewise
naturally-occurring "Brazen Hussy," resulting in green & plum mottled leaves
& cream colored bloom."

Here's the url:
http://www.paghat.com/ranunculusficaria.html

and there's this from the bottom of an article on Ranunculus with the url
below:
"John RL Carter (M.A.) is proprietor of Rowden Gardens, Brentor, Nr.
Tavistock, Devon, PL19 0NG. Tel: +44 (0) 1822 810275 The nursery and gardens
hold a large collection of rare and unusual plants and he 'battles to get
the gardening back into water gardening'. John is President of the Devon
Group of the NCCPG and holds two National Collections - Fallopia /
Persicaria and Ranunculus ficaria. Catalogue available £1.50. "

http://www.plants-magazine.com/Artic...ional115.shtml

I should think a call to Mr Carter would sort out any questions.


--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(remove the weeds to email me)