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Author Topic: Pleione 2024  (Read 6162 times)

Tim Harberd

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Pleione 2024
« on: January 28, 2024, 06:53:10 PM »
Potting up finally finished about 10 days ago.

This year I've decided to experiment with some bulbils. I took 100 'Ducat' bulbils, total weight 9 grams (!) , and split them across four pots. Each pot had a different compost mix in it.

At the end of the season I'll count the bulbs/bulbils in each pot and weigh them.

Its not that I need any more Ducat, I'm just curious about the survival rate of bulbils, and how much more (or less) living material (weight) I'll have at the end of the year.

Tim DH

Maggi Young

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #1 on: January 28, 2024, 09:00:10 PM »
It'll be  interesting to learn the result of this experiment, Tim.
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

Editor: International Rock Gardener e-magazine

Tim Harberd

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #2 on: April 06, 2024, 02:34:00 PM »
Hi Maggi,
     Hopefully they'll soon look like this! My first pot of the season. I'm surprised it is 'only' about 10 days early given how warm the winter has been. I saw primroses in flower above Dent Station (highest mainline station in England) in February.....

Tim DH

Tim Harberd

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #3 on: April 21, 2024, 08:16:09 AM »
   Took this pot of MaryB to our local allotment show yesterday. … It came second in its class to an (IMHO) unremarkable Amaryllis! ... I don’t mind. That’s Showing for you….

   I don’t often sell Pleiones, but I did last winter. Sadly three people who received stock from me have reported poorly developed flowers on some of the plants. They have all, independently, suggested that this might be due to virus.

   One of the most suspect cultivars is MaryB! The pot shown here has two ‘issues’.  An outer petal has an abnormal colour break and a flower has ‘burnt’ tips on the inner petals. Personally I’d put that down to the warm Spring.

   When I first started growing Pleiones for myself, Dad warned me against trying to ‘force’ the Shantungs. Back in the 1970s, in order to cover as many AGS/SRGC shows as possible, he had experimented in bringing some pots on, with disastrous results. (MaryB is a Shepard’s Warning, so half Shantung.)

   These days one doesn’t need to ‘force’ things! In fact its hard NOT to have things flowering earlier than they used to. Maybe Pleione growing (or at least the growing of some cultivars.) will become a casualty of Climate Change? I can’t be the only person who has planted out an Apricot tree in recent years! It seems reasonable that as some things move into our sphere of possibilities some other things will, sadly, move out.

   Then again, maybe my stock has picked up a virus and will collapse. As it stands, the two examples illustrated are as bad as it gets. So I’m not panicking yet!

ruweiss

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #4 on: May 13, 2024, 09:26:01 PM »
These Pleiones survived our last (mild) winter in the open garden. Left plant is P. formosana, middle P. formosana alba and at
right is P. limprichtii. Nothing special, but I like the anyway. Got the white plants from a late friend without name and origin.
Rudi Weiss,Waiblingen,southern Germany,
climate zone 8a,elevation 250 m

Graham Catlow

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #5 on: October 15, 2024, 01:18:16 PM »
Hi,
I wonder if anyone in the UK is still growing Pleione forrestii. Mine eventually faded away and no one I know has any either. If you have any and would be willing to sell me have one please let me know.
Please send me a PM.
Bo'ness. Scotland

MarcR

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Re: Pleione 2024
« Reply #6 on: October 19, 2024, 06:22:02 AM »
Tim & ruweiss,

                                              NICE!
Marc Rosenblum

Falls City, OR USA

I am in USDA zone 8b where temperatures almost never fall below 15F -9.4C.  Rainfall 50" 110 cm + but none  June-September.  We seldom get snow; but when it comes we get 30" overnight. Soil is sandy loam with a lot of humus. 
Oregon- where Dallas is NNW of Phoenix

 


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