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Re: Digitalis obscura
- To: Nan Sterman <n*@ucsd.edu>
- Subject: Re: Digitalis obscura
- From: L* R* <l*@peak.org>
- Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 17:21:51 -0700 (PDT)
Nan:
I've grown this for several years. The original couple of plants did
well on a rock garden wall for about 3 years, disappeared in the past two
[very] wet winters. I've planted out progeny of these in a number of
places. It's definitely perennial, with evergreen base, not weedy, and
doesn't need much water. To get the display you saw, you'd need to mass
several plants, and probably fertilize a bit. I love the flower color,
and the very prolonged boom is also an asset.
Easy from seed, sown outdoors in winter. It's likely to take a full year
to get blooming-size plants. It should also be easy to root from
cuttings, either spring or fall. I've read that seed from exchanges is
often D. parviflora. The latter is similarly-colored, but has much
smaller, chinless flowers.
Loren Russell, Corvallis, Oregon
On Fri, 27 Jun 1997, Nan Sterman wrote:
> Anyone ever grown Digitalis obscura, sunset foxglove? I saw it in a
> magazine and would love to try it, but before I do, I'd appreciate the
> group's input.
>
> Thanks!!
>
> Nan
>
> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
> Nan Sterman, "gardening addict"
> Olivenhain, California
> Sunset Zone 24, USDA Zone 10b or 11
> +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
>
>
>
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