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Sternbergia lutea is also in bloomcheersfermi
Very nice Fermi, I do grow that form from R. Wallis ex Crete ad is a good increaser, although quite small compared to my other forms
Fantastic show Fermi ! Wish we could grow them outside like that .
Hi Angelo,yes, Otto has given me a bulb of the form he got from...Paul Furse, I think. It is still one bulb but flowers consistently - it is half way in size between "Rannweig's" S. sicula and the "commercial" form of S. lutea.Hi Kris,we always want what we can't get I'm impressed with what you can grow where you are. The Sternbergias grow themselves here - we just try to make sure they don't get watered during the summer when they are asleep!cheersfermi
Lovely Sternbergia spp. there. Do they set seed?
Fermi , for the record : the S. sicula I gave you came from Alan Edwards and was collected in the Selia Gorge ,Crete.
The autumn season has started in the northern hemisphere.In this trough of an early form of Sternbergia sicula there is 60+ flowers.It normally spent the winter, spring and summer in my green house along with some other big Sternbergia pots.But this year I was short of space and in June I placed them outside against a south facing wall. At that time it was very rainy, so I covered them with an almost closed plastic mini green house.We had a warm and sunny summer, and they got a god 'baking'. At the end of July i checked the temperature inside the mini green house and I was chocked to see that the surface temperature of the through was 53oC and the soil temperature was 46oC 5cm below the surface. I removed the cover immediately but as this was not the warmest day of the summer, I was sure all the bulbs has been killed.Luckily they were not, but they have had the baking of their life!Poul
Oh! My goodness, how wonderful they look! After such high temperatures you might have thought they were roasted enough to eat
In this through of an early form of Sternbergia sicula there is 60+ flowers.Poul
The autumn season has started in the northern hemisphere.In this through of an early form of Sternbergia sicula there is 60+ flowers.It normally spent the winter, spring and summer in my green house along with some other big Sternbergia pots.But this year I was short of space and in June I placed them outside against a south facing wall. At that time it was very rainy, so I covered them with an almost closed plastic mini green house.We had a warm and sunny summer, and they got a god 'baking'. At the end of July i checked the temperature inside the mini green house and I was chocked to see that the surface temperature of the through was 53oC and the soil temperature was 46oC 5cm below the surface. I removed the cover immediately but as this was not the warmest day of the summer, I was sure all the bulbs has been killed.Luckily they were not, but they have had the baking of their life!Poul