I hope you serious galanthophiles won't scorn a couple, probably simple, questions from one who has never moved on from the "pretty drift of snowdrops" attitude to the genus.
My sister has had a typical Oxfordshire village garden for nearly 50 years - about 100m x30m surrounded by high walls, with a few old apple trees and in spring, sheets of snowdrops in the corners. While I was working in it a couple of years ago I noticed she had a nice clump of doubles and then I looked closer and realised that all of her snowdrops were doubles and very uniform. I spent about an hour searching and found not one single.
My sister, who hadn't apparently even noticed she had doubles, says she has never planted any Galanthus. They were just there.
I know that the doubling gene is dominant and that doubles can produce viable pollen but wouldn't one have expected some reversion to the normal single over all those years?
Are these a named variety?
Sadly, she is having to move out and sell the house this year. Should I remove some of these plants to save what must be a very stable clone. If so how do I keep them unadulterated by my random singles?
Photos attached
Erle