A long cold spring in the whole of the United Kingdom and especially here on the east coast of Scotland. Buds on M. punicea are now showing and the first noses of various Dactylorhiza are just poking through. Seed of M. punicea sown last June as each pod ripened, germinated on time in Mid January but the seedlings have hated the unending cold grey skies and we still have not had even a midday temperature above 7 C. The seedlings have had gentle heat from soil warming cables under the seed trays for the last six weeks but the surface of the trays has always been cold. Hard frosts recently have damaged some hellebores but last years extensive plantings of M. punicea are now showing flower buds and have survived -10 C. without blemish.
I have sown nearly 60 Meconopsis seed numbers, much of it wild collected seeds from both ends of the Himalayas. The only seed so far germinating is seed at least 3 years old from my seed bank which is kept at about - 15 C.
There are new images to post on the blog but I am still learning how to do this!
Meconopsis Visual Reference Guide. Includes Photos, Taxonomy And Cultivation Information.

Monday, 18 March 2013
Tuesday, 26 February 2013
First Post from Webmaster - Dr. James Cobb
Deeply indebted to Steve Tubbrit who is a professional devisor of video games, who some years ago created the Meconopsis World website and now has updated it and created a Blog. Many people of my age and generation find this difficult and I am very grateful for his detailed written instructions, great patience and a huge amount of time and effort.
I aim to post new images and write regular updates about what is going on in the world of Meconopsis.
This Saturday - 2nd March - there is a meeting in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh with a comprehensive programme of lectures by the Meconopsis Group. Anyone interested would be welcome to attend - tea or coffee from 10 am. and lectures and business from 10.30. In the next few days once I have worked out how to use this new system properly I will write up the group that includes M. lyrata as changed by Chris Grey-Wilson. Chris has a new monograph on Meconopsis about to go to press and the Meconopsis Group is current compiling a new multi-authored book on cultivation and wild collected species in cultivation as well as chapters on hybrids. The Meconopsis Group also runs a wonderful seed exchange service for members.
Written 26th Feb. 2013. James L.S. Cobb.
I aim to post new images and write regular updates about what is going on in the world of Meconopsis.
This Saturday - 2nd March - there is a meeting in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh with a comprehensive programme of lectures by the Meconopsis Group. Anyone interested would be welcome to attend - tea or coffee from 10 am. and lectures and business from 10.30. In the next few days once I have worked out how to use this new system properly I will write up the group that includes M. lyrata as changed by Chris Grey-Wilson. Chris has a new monograph on Meconopsis about to go to press and the Meconopsis Group is current compiling a new multi-authored book on cultivation and wild collected species in cultivation as well as chapters on hybrids. The Meconopsis Group also runs a wonderful seed exchange service for members.
Written 26th Feb. 2013. James L.S. Cobb.
Monday, 28 January 2013
Chris Grey - WIlson
Chris Grey - Wilson gave an excellent series of talks all day at the November meeting of the Meconopsis Group in Edinburgh. There are now 75 species going into his new monograph which goes to the printers at the end of this year. Some species will be difficult to identify unless access can be had to herbarium material and very few places will have this material.
A seperate book is to be published as a multi-authored book on all aspects of cultivation.
This website will concentrate on identification for keen amateurs and will not use standard botanical keys but visual imagery to seperate difficult groups.
A seperate book is to be published as a multi-authored book on all aspects of cultivation.
This website will concentrate on identification for keen amateurs and will not use standard botanical keys but visual imagery to seperate difficult groups.
Thursday, 2 August 2012
News - M. lyrata
Another group that has just been split up including several new species is the M. lyrata group. This is little known in cultivation. I shall add these as soon as I get time under M. lyrata.
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
News - Summer 2012
This summer I flowered 6 different seed numbers of M. integrifolia which were all collected wild in China. Not One of them resembled the deep yellow dwarf upward flowering plants illustrated on this website and taken by Harry Jans at the very north of the range of this species. None had absolutely consistent 3 veined leaves which is a defing character of this species and a major separation from M. pseudointegrifolia. None of the flowers was such an intense deep yellow and upright and none had no style with a Papaver like stigma. None however would have passed as M. pseuodointegrifolia with obvious long styles, pendulous deep flowers of a cream yellow. Clearly there is a cline right through from a deep yellow northern upright plant to a tall cream yellow southern plant. The upright deep yellow flowers, dwarf stature and stiff 3 veined leaves may be an adaptation to a dry, windy open habitat. The problem lies with Carl Linneus. I have often wondered if he really believed all plants were God created ( almost certainly he did not ) and whether he had any understanding that plants might gradually adapt to changing habitats and climate even if he had no inkling of the genetic mechanisms. It would be much better to recognise super species above the level of genera.This can be seen in the M. horridula group ( 8 or 9 species and growing ). The integrifolia group are like this, so too M. grandis perhaps and some of the evergreen monocarpics. Others like the red M. punicea are very distinct though there is variation in growth and flowering of even these that differs between collecting sites.
Saturday, 1 January 2011
News - Spring 2011
Three new developments. Paul Egan has described 2 new species from Nepal. Meconopsis autumnalis and M. manasluensis ( Papaveraceae ) two new species of Himalayan poppies endemic to Central Nepal with sympatric congeners.
The link is http://www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/content/2011/f/pt00020p056.pdf
Details and images in time on the New Species Pages. Good colour illustrations in the paper.
Yoshida, Sun and Boufford have descibed 2 new species from the Mianning Xian region of Sichuan. These are Meconopsis pulchella, a relative of M. impedita and differing in a number of characteristics and M. heterandera which is very similar to M. rudis and M. racemosa but differs in having unique inflated and inwardly curved inner filamants that are inwardly curved. This is different from the unique filaments in M. henricii and M. sinomaculata. These are well illustrated in the paper which is available online in Acta Botanica Yunnanica 2010 32(6) 503 - 507. There are good colour illustrations
Finally Chris Grey-Wilson ( and a good general cultural section for all big blue poppies with John Mitchell of the RBGE ) has written in SIBBALDIA 8 ( available on-line ) an account Meconopsis Grandis - The True Himalayan Blue Poppy. This splits M. grandis into 3 new sub-species, M.g. orientalis ( N and NE ( Bhutan, NW Arunachal Pradesh and in the Cho La and Po La in Tibet )) This is the one we are most familiar with in gardens and includes L and S 600 and Betty's Dream Poppy, M. g. grandis East Nepal - Barun Khola and S and E of Everest as well as the Jongri region of Sikkim. M. g. jumlaensis is a small plant - well isolated from the other subspecies in west Nepal at Ghurchi Lagna in Jumla. These will be added in time to the Meconopsis grandis page but the paper is very well illustrated with good colour images.
The link is http://www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/content/2011/f/pt00020p056.pdf
Details and images in time on the New Species Pages. Good colour illustrations in the paper.
Yoshida, Sun and Boufford have descibed 2 new species from the Mianning Xian region of Sichuan. These are Meconopsis pulchella, a relative of M. impedita and differing in a number of characteristics and M. heterandera which is very similar to M. rudis and M. racemosa but differs in having unique inflated and inwardly curved inner filamants that are inwardly curved. This is different from the unique filaments in M. henricii and M. sinomaculata. These are well illustrated in the paper which is available online in Acta Botanica Yunnanica 2010 32(6) 503 - 507. There are good colour illustrations
Finally Chris Grey-Wilson ( and a good general cultural section for all big blue poppies with John Mitchell of the RBGE ) has written in SIBBALDIA 8 ( available on-line ) an account Meconopsis Grandis - The True Himalayan Blue Poppy. This splits M. grandis into 3 new sub-species, M.g. orientalis ( N and NE ( Bhutan, NW Arunachal Pradesh and in the Cho La and Po La in Tibet )) This is the one we are most familiar with in gardens and includes L and S 600 and Betty's Dream Poppy, M. g. grandis East Nepal - Barun Khola and S and E of Everest as well as the Jongri region of Sikkim. M. g. jumlaensis is a small plant - well isolated from the other subspecies in west Nepal at Ghurchi Lagna in Jumla. These will be added in time to the Meconopsis grandis page but the paper is very well illustrated with good colour images.
Monday, 1 March 2010
News - March 2010
Dr. Chris Grey-Wilson recently talked to the Meconopsis Group at the Royal Botanic gardens at Edinburgh. Dr Grey-Wilson is currently researching and writing a new monograph on the genus. He talked particularly about the group of species related to M. horridula. and described them as an aggregate of species still actively evolving. There are a number of quite clear cut species but many plants that do not fit in. Quite certainly what we grow as M. horridula in gardens is not that species but something much nearer the Chinese species M.pratti though it is clear that it will be called M.horridula by seed merchants and seed lists as that species for some time. The only other species that does grow relatively easily in cultivation is M. rudis - another Chinese species. I will gradually amend this site to take account of the way this story is unfolding. If you want to read further on this, then I shall use the page on this site of M. horridula to expand this.
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