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strange hybrids

Nature is the absolute master when it comes to creating hybrids. I have every shade of hellebore between deep maroon and mint green (the rose colored ones are so romantic!) and they all started with just three plants. The Painted Lady is prolific, it populated several flower beds with its eager descendants, fathered by the Ivory Prince and Burgundy varieties, and every year I make a game out of trying to guess what color they are going to be when they finally bloom.

The plant in the picture is a spotted dead nettle which had been lingering in bright sunshine in the back yard and produced modest but abundant purple flowers, the regular kind. I separated a runner and replanted it in the shade, where it took its sweet time to adjust. Now it covers an entire slope where it blooms at odd times throughout the year (it’s supposed to bloom in spring and these pictures were taken in August), but that’s not the oddest thing about it.

Divisions are supposed to be clones, right? They should look exactly like the mother plant? I have never seen flowers like these on their progenitor, I can only surmise the plants got cross pollinated by the Yellow Archangel variety, or more likely by the common dead nettle weed before they propagated from seed. The leaves are different too.

Shrug.

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