Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
About half of my collection are in the beds and troughs at the back of the house where they will get no sun until maybe March
So we must be saying that every year in Canada large numbers of narcissi are imported then left in the ground after flowering. These are then infected by the narcissus fly which destroy those bulbs but when the larvae pupate the following year they have next years imports to infect. The large quantities of imports mean that a much larger population of narcissus flies can be sustained than would be the case in a more static narcissus population, such as exists here in the UK.
If you dig-up a rotting bulb then the smell is very strong indeed so I thought a trained dog should be able to identify such a bulb whilst it was still in-situ.
As a reliative new comer to galanthus it is with much horror I have come across my first dealings with the dreaded narcissi fly and it's off Spring!.. But thinking back I probably had been 'attacked'by one on a small group of 'Trumps' about 3 years back as all but 1 of a small set of bulbs I bought came up flowering as normal and the other had a few wispy leaves which I can now say after 3 years is back flowering and multiplied well.This year had the same problem on a 'Trym' clump so decided to dig it up and found the bulb had been partly eaten and loads of little bulb lets had started to grow..any way after reading all the articles on this forum it does make you worry a little.I must admit the two attacks seem to have been where the drops had no cover from the many hostas I grow and had been left exposed,so my question after waffling on is at what point can you safely cut leaves off your galanthus without it having a effect on the health of the bulb and before the fly is active? and is this a recommended ploy any forum members use?