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H.Monk 03-01-2003 09:45 PM

Herbaceous Paeonia - advice please
 
When I moved, I left behind all my shrub paeonias behind, I suppose I will
spend a small fortune this Spring at the nurseries.
However, I notice in my seed cats, some herbaceous types, i.e.
p.mlokosewitschii, p.officinalis, p.cambessedesii and p.tenuifolia etc. It
does not say whether to expect flowers in the first season.
Has anyone had experience with these or similar. I live in Cornwall, approx
6 miles inland.
Thanks .......... Paul



Janet Galpin and Oliver Patterson 04-01-2003 12:46 AM

Herbaceous Paeonia - advice please
 
The message
from "H.Monk" contains these words:

When I moved, I left behind all my shrub paeonias behind, I suppose I will
spend a small fortune this Spring at the nurseries.
However, I notice in my seed cats, some herbaceous types, i.e.
p.mlokosewitschii, p.officinalis, p.cambessedesii and p.tenuifolia etc. It
does not say whether to expect flowers in the first season.



Not quite that easy I'm afraid. They'll take at least a year and
sometimes up to three years to germinate, depending on how fresh the
seed is. They will then take four or five further years to reach
flowering size.
I guess this explins why bthey're niot the cheapest plants to buy.

Janet G


Rodger Whitlock 04-01-2003 05:38 PM

Herbaceous Paeonia - advice please
 
On Fri, 3 Jan 2003 21:45:11 -0000, "H.Monk"
wrote:

However, I notice in my seed cats, some herbaceous types, i.e.
p.mlokosewitschii, p.officinalis, p.cambessedesii and p.tenuifolia etc. It
does not say whether to expect flowers in the first season.
Has anyone had experience with these or similar. I live in Cornwall, approx
6 miles inland.


Species peonies take five to ten years to reach flowering size
after germination. They mature more quickly if planted out rather
than kept in pots, once they have put on enough growth to survive
the rough and tumble of the garden.

Admittedly, they are beautiful things, but they are all singles
and their flowers are quite fleeting. You'd best think of them as
being an entirely different category from the big hybrid
cultivars usually grown.

I suggest you put your family on a diet of cold water and stale
bread. Tell them it is healthy, and a good way to start the New
Year by letting the body purge itself of toxins. Or some similar
fairy tale. In a short time, this will free up sufficient funds
to buy the cultivars you really want.

P. cambessedesii is fairly tender; it might do rather well in the
mild Cornish climate. Its flowers are scented of cloves. A
delightful plant, unfortunately slightly too tender for me.

--
Rodger Whitlock
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada


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