Spine Tingler Epimedium Late Winter - February 2024
This past May (2023), I planted three Spine Tingler Epimedium that I brought home from the Morton Arboretum Arbor Day Plant Sale and stuck them in amongst the other epimedium that have survived - Amber Queen. These are planted under a large Catalpa tree in the backyard, along the north side bed.
Below is a photo showing the current state of these three (along with one Amber Queen on the far right of the image):
My experience with epimedium is that they are VERY slow to get established. They aren't in a state of growing, but also not so much a state of dying. More like...just a state of 'being.
I've looked back at the photos of when these went in and I'm not sure they've actually grown. But, I'm also not sure they've shrunk at all. I'd love NOTHING MORE than to see these spiny-filled barrenwort/epimedium to naturalize this whole area to make a large colony of groundcover.
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Be nice to each other here.