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I thought they required summer heat ...I would dearly love to flower one or the other, maybe we are in lycoris-amaryllis purgatory here in a maritime zone 6.johnw
I have tried them many times. For some reason they stayed dormant for a year or two and then died
I wonder why it is difficult over here? Does it not get warm enough in the summer or are we too wet? I would be worth finding out if anyone is successful in the UK.
Jim - I am absolutely floored by these. What solace indeed!I thought they required summer heat and I assume you, as the rest of the east, have had a cool & wet summer as we normally expect here. So I am a bit puzzled. Are those flowers the results of 2008's summer heat and the bulbs are not liable to flower next year? I can tell you that Lycoris are a disaster here. L. squamigera never flowers and peters out or gets winter-killed; L. radiata I got in 1974 and it has never had a single flower in the greenhouse (top shelf) though it has made plenty of offsets. L. radiata's leaves just died down last week and I thought of putting a plastic dome over the pot and cooking it in the sun - maybe the heat is required earlier in the year..So what exactly are the requirements for L. squamigera and Amaryllis belladonna? Are you implying the former summer heat and the latter summer cool? Maybe we should try Amaryllis or would it be too tender? I would dearly love to flower one or the other, maybe we are in lycoris-amaryllis purgatory here in a maritime zone 6.By the way I can just flower Nerine bowdenii against the house. It took many years before it decided to start flowering.Thanks for the shots.johnw
should do well for you - L. chinensis and L. longituba among others.
Hi Jim,even in frosty central Victoria (regularly -5o and often as low as -7o) we can grow Amaryllis belladonna quite well in the open where it will flower if given enough sun. But I have great difficulty flowering Lycoris squamigera - the "Hardy Amaryllis" as I once saw it described in an OGF magazine from the 1960s! L. incarnata, L. elsae, L. aurea and L. radiata seem to flower regularly here but not L. squamigera and infrequently L. sprengeri.cheersfermi
I see there has been talk of Lycoris squamigera in the PBS lists, also....http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/pbs/2009-August/034602.html ..... and others...