Wooly androsace (Androsace lanuginosa)

Submitted by Kelaidis on Mon, 03/01/2010 - 23:14

I recently scanned some old slides, and this is one of them. The color is all wrong, and somehow over-exposed, but it does convey the size and majesty of Androsace lanuginosa when it is at its full glory. For over a decade back in the 1980's and early 1990's a small hillside in the Rock Alpine Garden at Denver Botanic Gardens was draped with this outrageous carpet of bloom. It's more or less in full sun. The soil was a deep, rich scree: for whatever reason, this plant loved it and spread and bloomed pretty much steadily from May to Autumn frost. Eventually, it used up whatever nutrients, or something changed and it died back bit by bit. I think we still have a few pieces growing here and there, but nothing so lavish and rich.

I have tried getting it to repeat the trick at my home garden--and have some puny clumps (by comparison). There is some major nursery: Monrovia or Hines, that was selling gallon pots brimming with dozens of stems--so someone can grow it well even in pots!

For me one of the great pleasures of rock gardening is finding a spot where a gorgeous alpine does its thing especially well--for a good long time. Now to do it again!

Comments


Submitted by Sellars on Tue, 03/02/2010 - 22:22

We manage to grow Androsace lanuginosa in our climate without too much fuss. It gets very lank and soggy in the winter so I cut it right back and it grows vigorous trailing stems the next year and flowers in the late summer and fall.  It is easy to propagate so I have it in a few different locations. It prefers sun.  Here's a picture.


Submitted by Lori S. on Tue, 03/02/2010 - 22:56

Ah, yes... much nicer than my young plant... which, after calling it "puny" earlier,  I will shamelessly show here anyway.  ;)  The stoloniferous(?) ones seem to do reasonably well here (re. more mature specimens of other species).  I haven't grown any of the more cushion-form species yet.  I like the way the colour of the flower "eye" changes when it's been fertilized.


Submitted by Hoy on Wed, 03/03/2010 - 05:06

I have tried several Androsaces but the winter weather is usually too wet! (Not so this year which is the driest and coldest in 100 years. - Who talks about global warming now! 8)
Unfortunately I have not any Androsaces left.


Submitted by Sellars on Wed, 03/03/2010 - 20:40

Lori:

That's a lovely Androsace, not puny at all.  If you want it to grow bigger you could try some nutrients.  A. lanuginosa seems to like a richer soil than the cushion types.


Submitted by Doreen on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 00:29

From memory this is Androsace lanuginosa (lost its label). On a sunny scree it is almost rampant, needing a couple of armfuls removing every other year as it invades its neighbours. Covered in very pale lavender pink flowers, set off by the greyish silky-hairy foliage, the yellow eye turns red after pollination so you get a nice two-tone effect.


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 06:16

What a great garden plant this is! It is very vigorous here too and tolerates our variable weather well. I have various forms of sarmentosa/studiosorum on a sand bed and these do well too but do get winter cover. On a good stony scree they could probably cope with more winter wet.


Submitted by Lori S. on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 08:58

Wow, Doreen, your plant is magnificent!  I hope you will show us a lot more of your garden - from the view in your photo, it looks wonderful!

(P.S. I used my forum moderator super powers to merge this thread with the pre-existing Androsace lanuginosa thread.  :) )


Submitted by RickR on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 18:19

Lori wrote:

Wow, Doreen, your plant is magnificent!  :)

Indeed!  You must be doing something right! :o

And what is the plant in the foreground?


Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 19:43

Lori wrote:

(P.S. I used my forum moderator super powers to merge this thread with the pre-existing Androsace lanuginosa thread.  :) )

So that is how you get such wonderful photos.  You are able to leap mountains in a single bound.  :)

James


Submitted by Doreen on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 21:04

RickR wrote:

Lori wrote:

Wow, Doreen, your plant is magnificent!  :)

Indeed!  You must be doing something right! :o

And what is the plant in the foreground?

Rick: I don't think I have much to do with the exuberance of this plant, I think it's the climate (lots of sun and not too much of Tim's winter wet) that's responsible, along with the depth of glacial moraine I garden on. I've been astonished (and thankful!) since moving here how plants I mollycoddled undercover in the UK live happily outdoors with no fuss.

The plant in the immediate foreground is an oxalis (probably planted in the wrong spot as once it gets into its stride it'll probably get too exuberant too). Not everything thrives though - the plant in the left corner is a Myosotis - a "cushion planted for natural effect" i.e. dead in the middle!  ;D

Lori: thanks for moving my contribution to the right place, haven't got to grips with the navigation of your forum yet. Hope the pics are brightening up your northern hemisphere winter.


Submitted by Sellars on Sun, 12/11/2011 - 10:00

Trond:
We also have very wet winters but the A. lanuginosa survive.  They become a very soggy mess and die-back but I just shear them to the ground.  Then new growth start to appear in late spring with the main flowering in late summer.


Submitted by Hoy on Sun, 12/11/2011 - 13:25

David wrote:

Trond:
We also have very wet winters but the A. lanuginosa survive.  They become a very soggy mess and die-back but I just shear them to the ground.  Then new growth start to appear in late spring with the main flowering in late summer.

Thank you David, then I will continue trying it with hope ;)