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#1
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propagating valerian from seed?
Hi,
I would like to to propagate my valerian plants from seed, and have begin to collect some of the seeds with their little parachutes. I am collecting ones that have fallen off and stuck to the rest of the plant, or that come loose with a very light touch. What am I supposed to do with them now? Store them until spring, or sow them, or ?? I would be grateful for any help! Cheers, Chris |
#2
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Chris Nellist wrote:
Hi, I would like to to propagate my valerian plants from seed, and have begin to collect some of the seeds with their little parachutes. I am collecting ones that have fallen off and stuck to the rest of the plant, or that come loose with a very light touch. What am I supposed to do with them now? Store them until spring, or sow them, or ?? I would be grateful for any help! Cheers, Chris I'd sow half now, and save the other half till spring. -- Mike. |
#3
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Chris,
I have a Valerian plant in my bog garden. The rest of the garden is very sandy and free draining. This year I have had seedlings appear everywhere, in plant pots with my bay tree, in the strawberry bed, even amongst my overwintered perennials in pots. My treatment would be to sow now expecting to see them germinate next year after receiving a cold treatment over winter. The RHS book on propagating plants says sow in spring at 10=B0C |
#4
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My Valerian propagates itself very well, no help from me at all. The old
wall at the front of the house is covered in deep pink pale pink and white Valerian and it looks a picture, when it starts to go over which is about now I cut the seed heads off and very ofton get a second flush of flowers. It turns up all over the garden and most people around here have some somewhere. kate |
#6
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On Sat, 16 Jul 2005 14:44:18 GMT, Kate Morgan
wrote: My Valerian propagates itself very well, no help from me at all. The old wall at the front of the house is covered in deep pink pale pink and white Valerian and it looks a picture, when it starts to go over which is about now I cut the seed heads off and very ofton get a second flush of flowers. It turns up all over the garden and most people around here have some somewhere. Grows wild around here in the poorest of soils. Intermingled are white, a sort of dirty pink and a reasonable red. But they never seem to cross-fertilise, i.e. never any intermediate shades. Anyone know why? -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#7
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In article .com,
Clifford writes Chris, I have a Valerian plant in my bog garden. The rest of the garden is very sandy and free draining. This year I have had seedlings appear everywhere, in plant pots with my bay tree, in the strawberry bed, even amongst my overwintered perennials in pots. Is Valerian officinalis? I guessed the OP was talking about Centranthus ruber because he was talking about the fluffy seedheads. I can't remember what the seeds of Valerian officinalis are like - are they fluffy too? -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
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