Description
Dionysia –
There are about 42 species of tufted or cushion forming, sub shrubby, evergreen perennials, in this genus. They occur on shady cliffs in arid mountainous areas of Southwestern and Central Asia. The leaves, usually oblong to spoon shaped, often with a woolly coating beneath, are borne in rosettes at the ends of branching shoots. In spring or early summer it bears long tubed, 5 petalled, salverform flowers, with spreading lobes, are carried solitary or in umbels.
Only grown in climate with cool to cold winters and needing protection from excessive damp on the foliage, these plant are normally grown under cover in pots or in the hollows of tufa rocks in full sun. Make sure that the cushions are sitting up on a bed of coarse gravel to stop crown rot.
Prone to aphids and gray mold.
D. tapetodes – This tight, cushion forming perennial from Turkmenistan, Northeastern Iran and Central Afghanistan grows 2″ tall and 8″ wide. It produces rosettes of oblong, obovate, or spoon shaped, glandular, mid green leaves, to 1/8″ long, sometimes with a dense, woolly white or yellow farina beneath. In late spring and early summer it bears masses of solitary, stemless, long tubed, sometimes scented yellow flowers, to ½” across. Relatively easy to grow.
Zones 5-7