In message
, Des
Higgins writes
On Apr 25, 2:28 pm, Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote:
In message , Nick Maclaren
writes
Like a small gorse, except blue. No seeds at this time of year,
unfortunately :-(
But what is it? It looked an excellent plant for a dry, sunny
bank? Obviously cold-hardy, deer resistant, yada yada ....
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
Going to the Jepson Flora Project and looking for blue-flowered legumes
comes up with Psorothamnus (several species thereof). The other blue
flowered legumes in California (e.g. several lupins and vetches) aren't
spinous (fide Google, but Google was being obviously reluctant to
provide complete search results - e.g. Psorothamnus blue was producing
more hits for Psorothamnus than Fabaceae blue, even though they should
have produced the same).
But the range given doesn't include the Sierra Nevada, though some
species occur in mountains of the Mohave Desert or Basin and Range
Province.
http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/g...t.pl?3691,4186
http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=PSORO
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley
California??? bugger; I assumed Sierra Nevada was in Spain; oh well;
scratch Erinacea than :-)
You may have assumed correctly. There's a Sierra Nevada in Spain, and a
Sierra Nevada in California (also in Mexico and Chile, fide Wikipedia).
I assumed the second, quite possibly incorrectly (being in
correspondence about a plant from Baja at the moment may have biased my
interpretation). The fact that the Jepson Flora Project is not producing
a good match is a point in favour of your assumption.
For Spanish plants see
URL:
http://www.rjb.csic.es/floraiberica/..._.php?familia=
Leguminosae
It's probably not quite as voluminous as the Californian flora, but it's
still inconveniently large.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley