Data: 2004-10-21 09:45:17
Temat: Re: Rozmnazanie choiny
Od: "JerzyN" <N...@m...pl>
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Użytkownik "Ewa Szczęniak" <e...@b...uni.wroc.pl>
> A jakie masz?
> tak dokładniej?
> Poza 'Minuta' i 'Minima' :-)
> Będę wiedziała, czego nie brać, skoro takie same :-)
http://www.hort.uconn.edu/plants/t/tsucan/tsucan1.ht
ml
'Albospica' - This compact plant has bright white new growth and
benefits from light shade. 'Gentsch White' is similar, forming a rounded
compact plant to 4' tall and wide. The tips of the branches are silvery
on this plant.
'Aurea Compacta' (also known as 'Everitt's Golden') - This smaller form
grows stiffly upright, but it is chiefly notable for its bright gold
foliage. 'Golden Splendor' is an upright-growing form with golden
foliage that grows quickly in the landscape.
'Cole's Prostrate' - Originally found in New Hampshire, this is a true
prostrate form that creeps along the ground and spreads widely. It
appreciates light shade.
'Curly' - A very unusual form, this plant features congested branches
bearing needles which curl around the stems.
'Horsford Contorted' (also known as 'Pig Tails') - Another addition to
the limited list of small trees with contorted growth, this selection
offers branches that are coiled and twisted. It forms a small tree at
maturity and is a good conversation piece when well placed in the
garden.
'Jeddeloh' - One of the more popular cultivars, this plant forms a small
mound of layered branches. The plant tends to have a depression in its
center, thus many observers refer to this selection as the "Bird's Nest
Hemlock".
'Minuta' and 'Pygmaea' - These are micro-miniature rock garden
curiosities discovered in Vermont. They form dwarf buns of dark green
needles that only increase at the rate of .25"-.5" per year.
'Sargentii' (also known as f. pendula and 'Pendula') - The most common
cultivar available and one of the most handsome, this selection is a
large weeping tree that may reach 15' tall and twice as wide. The
weeping branchlets are held aloft by thick stems, giving this sturdy
weeper a graceful appearance. The needles are dark green and the plant
usually forms cones.
http://www.hort.uconn.edu/plants/campus/uconn/ever/w
alk4/ten/tsucap.html
'Watnong Star' - Discovered in New Hampshire, this rounded compact plant
features foliage that is frosted with white, especially on new growth.
--
Pozdrawiam, Jerzy
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