Hepatica nobilis  var.pubescens
(Kesuhamaso)

Family - Ranunculaceae
Category - Perennial
Origin - Japan
Season of Interest - Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter
Hardiness - H4
Height - 10cm
Width - 15cm
Location - The Woodland Walk

Description: A small, clump-forming Perennial with a mounding habit. Reniform leaves have 3 rounded lobes and are covered in fine hair. The leaves can be dark green or have attractive silver marbling. Bowl-shaped flowers are found in various shades of pink, violet or white and are sometimes bicoloured. The Blooms are held singly and produced from late winter into early spring.

Synonym - Hepatica pubescens

Flower:

Small, bowl-shaped flowers can be found in various shades of pink, violet or white and may be bicoloured. Many have attractive purple pistils at the centre of each bloom. Each flower is subtended by 3 rounded green bracts. The flowers are held singly and produced in February and March.

Flower colour: Pink, violet, white

Flower shape: Bowl-shaped flowers held singly

Flowering time: February, March

Foliage:

Hairy, reniform leaves have 3 rounded lobes and a leathery texture. The leaves are dark green and are sometimes marbled with silvery white. The leaves are held at the base of the plant and retained through the winter. A new crop of leaves is produced once the flowers have finished in spring.

Foliage Senescence: Evergreen

Foliage Shape: Reniform with 3 rounded lobes

Propagation:

Division, seed.

Cultivation:

Best in a sheltered position in partial shade in rich, fertile soil that is moisture-retentive but well-drained.