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Newbie, please be gentle!!!

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  • Silver surferSilver surfer Posts: 4,719
    edited March 2021
    Welcome to the forums

    4. Looks like Tulipa..Tulip to me.

    Eranthis hyemalis...winter aconite pics below.
    Perthshire. SCOTLAND .
  • Hi, welcome to the site. I have turned bright green with envy.

    How lucky are you with those glorious greenhouses. It is mind blowing what you will be able to grow in them, also in your lovely spacious garden.

    I would agree with 1,2, mimosa is the garden name, and 3 above. It is phenomenally difficult to identify pink camellias without close up pics. because there are thousands of them with only tiny differences . I am mourning my Sophora Golden King, it succumbed finally because I was growing it in a container for too long.

    I have no lawn in my garden. Slate chipping paths and bark chipping paths are my choice, winding between beds. 

    I am sure your new garden will give you many happy hours plus just as many hours of frustration.
  • Lovely contrasts of the yellow and magenta there and an AMAZING greenhouse.

    I'd just add that the pic third up from the bottom appears to me to be a dwarf tulip. I don't think it's Tulipa sylvestris as it is a stronger yellow with broader leaves than mine. ...On the other hand, it could just be the camera angle and it's not as little as it looks here.
  • TagwexTagwex Posts: 44
    Time for another bunch of plants to identify, thanks to all responders on the last batch, now that I have been pointed in the right direction I can cross reference them when I find my RHS encyclopedia and figure out how to best look after them all.

    pansy?

  • K67K67 Posts: 2,506
    1 and 2 are primula
    2 is euphorbia griffithii
    2 some type of sedum
    I too am loving the greenhouse! 
  • didywdidyw Posts: 3,573
    I don't think the little yellow flowers are aconite as the leaves look wrong.  A species tulip perhaps? Tulipa dasystemon?
    Gardening in East Suffolk on dry sandy soil.
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