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My old bones won't take anything less than 20C these days.
I sowed some Cyclamen rohlfsianum seed seed mid-August and put them where all my seed pots go in an open frame outside. Weather's been awful here for the last couple of weeks apart from the odd reasonable day and , as there was no germination, I took pity on it and put it on the kitchen windowsill. I now see I have three seedlings germinated out of five sown. Do I assume that keeping them indoors will be the best option and try and keep them in growth for as long as possible?
Hello Cycla-nutsJust wondering if anyone can help with the ID of a Cyclamen recently spotted in the Peloponnese: http://www.srgc.net/forum/index.php?topic=12363.msg316743#msg316743Many thanks!
I was using Kit Grey-Wilson's Bulbs of Greece and John Richard's Mountain Flower Walks, which suggest that C.hed.confusum is also in the Southern Peloponnese. Has the classification of these plants changed such that those confusum-type plants in the Pelops are now known as something else? I found some plants elsewhere that I also thought could be C.h.confusum but will have to look at my photos again.
Having just looked at the PBS website I found this photo of 'cochleate' leaves apparently on C.graecum which makes me think that maybe the flower on my plant did belong to the leaves after all and it's just a form of C.graecum:
Matt - yes, there was a reclassification a few years ago following fieldwork and DNA analysis by the Cyclamen Society/Reading University. Previously, those heds known as C. hederifolium var confusum found in the Peloponnese, the Greek Islands (and Sicily?) are now C. hederifolium subsp. crassifolium. Those coming specifically from Crete are now considered to be a separate species, C. confusum. The complication is that populations of 'ordinary' hederifolium are also found throughout the same range (I think) but not sure to what extent they overlap. I'll have to read through some back copies of the CS journal which have a number of articles about this. In fact, though, the three forms generally do look different when grown side by side. In time, I hope the reclassification registers with everyone because I have a number of pots of seed exchange 'confusum' that don't need Reading's DNA analysis to tell me they're subsp. crassifolium! My advice to donors would be not to label anything 'confusum' unless absolutely sure it has Cretan origins.I see what you mean! Was the plant growing in a shady or more open, sunny location? Also, subsp crassifolium is often scented (and confusum has a good scent in my experience).