Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
I have sown some different Trillium a few years ago. They are in pots, my question is, what time is best to replant them.They are now in dormancy.
Quote from: John Aipassa on July 20, 2009, 08:54:18 PMQuote from: Guff on July 19, 2009, 04:26:08 AMCollected some seed today, and planted them. I washed the seed first, then sowed in a leaf compost bed. I will try to keep the spot moist until fall, maybe some will show in the spring? It has taken two springs for me to see seedlings above ground in the past.If sown fresh (straight from the berry without any treatment), kurabayashii seed gives me the highest chance of germination the very first spring after sowing. This year even erectum seeds decided to appear in the spring after being sown fresh last summer. So, it is possible to have germination the following spring after sowing. Normally it will take two springs though.Cheers,When you have this early germination, how long time is it until you get winter conditions after sowing?Göte
Quote from: Guff on July 19, 2009, 04:26:08 AMCollected some seed today, and planted them. I washed the seed first, then sowed in a leaf compost bed. I will try to keep the spot moist until fall, maybe some will show in the spring? It has taken two springs for me to see seedlings above ground in the past.If sown fresh (straight from the berry without any treatment), kurabayashii seed gives me the highest chance of germination the very first spring after sowing. This year even erectum seeds decided to appear in the spring after being sown fresh last summer. So, it is possible to have germination the following spring after sowing. Normally it will take two springs though.Cheers,
Collected some seed today, and planted them. I washed the seed first, then sowed in a leaf compost bed. I will try to keep the spot moist until fall, maybe some will show in the spring? It has taken two springs for me to see seedlings above ground in the past.
Robert Rolfe told us on Saturday Trillium rivale is now Pseudotrillium rivale. The selections with silver veined leaves are now forma reticulatum
Quote from: mark smyth on October 20, 2009, 06:56:00 PMRobert Rolfe told us on Saturday Trillium rivale is now Pseudotrillium rivale. The selections with silver veined leaves are now forma reticulatumAha, an evil splitter!Pseudotrillium I will grudgingly accept, but not forma reticulatum, as silver veined leaves are sporadic in populations of Trillium rivale. It seems to me that honoring some variant with a formal taxonomic designation somehow implies that there are wild populations with the character and other populations without it.At one time, Romanian botanists were naming every little variation they found but at least they had the gumption to use the taxonomic category lusus, meaning sport or freak (the latter usually in the phrase lusus naturae). Lusus is the lowest level in the taxonomic hierarchy and may be deprecated these days.All of which raises two questions: first, who is to say that the type specimen of Trillium rivale did not have silver-veined leaves? Further, what does the botanical description of Trillium rivale say? Does anyone have access to the original Latin diagnosis? If the type had veined leaves, the rules of botanical nomenclature preclude distinguishing it by an additional epithet; you'd have to name the unmarked leaf specimens forma phyllo-immaculata, or, better lusus p-m.A second question arises after consulting my Latin dictionary. In Latin, "lusus" means sport in the sense of recreation, not sport in the sense of freak. I suspect that translating lusus naturć as "freak of nature" is incorrect; a better translation would make clear the implicit idea that sports are the result of Ma Nature's playfulness. Perhaps "natural sport" is a better translation. Remember, you read it here first.