grady
Well-Known Member
These are pictures of montanum growing wild on our property. They have been here at least since 1999 when my wife first noticed them (I have lived on these 20 acres since 1988).
A photo of the main "patch" (there are 13 of them). Each red flag is a clump of plants:
New shoots this spring:
In all their glory:
You can see from the photos that dappled sunlight is the rule here; canopy closure is 50%-60%, with mature Douglas fir and Ponderosa pine. The plants are all volunteers and their origin is unknown. There are 13 clumps of plants , consisting of just over 100 individual plants, separated by up to 500 feet. Winters can be quite cold, zero Fahrenheit and below. Spring and summer are usually dry; our region gets about 16 inches of rain a year. Summer temps top at in the mid 90's in August. All the plants are growing in the forest duff. All of them flower and produce seed pods each year. I transplanted one of the plants to a garden area last summer, where it gets a lot more water; so far this spring, it has shoots coming up.
A photo of the main "patch" (there are 13 of them). Each red flag is a clump of plants:
New shoots this spring:
In all their glory:
You can see from the photos that dappled sunlight is the rule here; canopy closure is 50%-60%, with mature Douglas fir and Ponderosa pine. The plants are all volunteers and their origin is unknown. There are 13 clumps of plants , consisting of just over 100 individual plants, separated by up to 500 feet. Winters can be quite cold, zero Fahrenheit and below. Spring and summer are usually dry; our region gets about 16 inches of rain a year. Summer temps top at in the mid 90's in August. All the plants are growing in the forest duff. All of them flower and produce seed pods each year. I transplanted one of the plants to a garden area last summer, where it gets a lot more water; so far this spring, it has shoots coming up.