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http://www.whiteflowerfarm.com/22955-...
Anemone sylvestris
This Old World species bears masses of glistening white, fragrant blooms in May with repeat bloom during the cool days of early fall. The simple flowers are carried on 18in stems and look lovely in bright woodlands or the sunny wild gardens where this plant belongs. Try it as an underplanting for Asiatic Lilies; it will extend the Lilies' season of bloom and shade their feet from the hot sun. A. sylvestris is a vigorous spreader, but that's no vice with looks like these. As with other 'near-wild' plants, it is not fussy about soil and is pest-free. The only thing it can't endure is desert heat.






Thank you Miriam

Thanks Jo, they appear to be healthy and are growing really well except for a few leafy vegetables that seem to have something eating away at them. I simply cut off that portion of the leaf. I don't know if that is wise or not.



Oh and for powdery mildew, add a tsp of baking soda to the water & dishsoap (amounts noted in prev comment) and spray affected area's once a day for 10 days. Make sure not to spray foliage until after direct sun passes so you don't scorch the foliage.

Adrienne - most folks buy these as tubers (they look like little hard rocks) in the fall when the garden centers are selling daffodils and tulips and plant them then. In some places you might find them in late winter when lillies and dahlias are sold. As tubers, they're pretty inexpensive. Most "big box" stores sell them in packs with multiple colors although in smaller nurseries I find you can get them by color. Just ask someone knowledgeable at the garden center when they sell anemone tubers and mark your calendar.

Thanks for the advice.
Here's a link to the photo. It's in my public Picasa file: https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo...
ps. Forgot to mention. I can't ask my neighbour himself. While he grows anything and everything very well, he is terrible with names. When I've spoken with him about this or that plant, he just shrugs his shoulders and tells me that he simply sticks stuff in the ground. He didn't even know what the black-eyed susans were called. Yeap. Amazing man.