
If California poppy were not the State Flower of California, sky lupine, Lupinus nanus, might be. Even though the perfect blue of sky lupine is the opposite of the perfect orange of California poppy, both of these brightly colorful flowers have several similarities, and are often sown together in autumn or winter for their early spring bloom. Both are native to western North America, but are very commonly displaced by exotic (non native) plants. As natives, they can easily self sow if competing specie are controlled. Both are satisfied with annual rainfall. As long as they are not watered too much in poorly draining soils, they are not too discriminating about soil. They do want full sun though.
Sky lupine is an annual that does not get very large, no more than two feet high and half as wide. It seems to be more colorful where it is kept less than a foot high by good sun exposure and wind. The finely textured, palmately compound foliage (divided into smaller leaflets that are arranged in a palmate pattern) gives it width, but only the lower half of its height. The upper half is its narrow spikes of small, neatly arranged ‘pea-shaped’ flowers.
So pretty! I don’t think I’ve been introduced to this Lupine species before. I’m currently out taking photos of our Lupinus texensis, and it’s fun to compare the species.
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This species was trendy while Brent and I were in school during the late 1980s, and likely afterward, but seems to be common elsewhere. There are likely so many species of Lupine that are more reliable within their respective ranges. For example. Lupinus texensis that performs so well within its native range does not perform so well here. I have tried.
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That would look lovely with the California Poppy
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Yes; it is funny that you say so because that was the most popular combination for it while it was a fad in the late 1980s. I thought that opposite colors look odd together, but I believe that landscape designer refer to that as ‘contrast’. It is the combination of an exemplary orange and an exemplary blue. Regardless, they work splendidly together.
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