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Not sure if this is the right place to ask , but I have some martagon seeds in a baggie with damp vermiculite at room temperature, they've been in the bag since 8th Jan and are getting roots.Not sure if I have to leave them at warm for another 9 weeks or if I can move them into the fridge for 3 months.Any advice appreciated.
You need to keep them warm until tiny bulbils have formed, then into the fridge for a few weeks cold before potting to induce leaf growth. I have martagon cattaniae seed in bags still in the warm now, put into the moist vermiculite in about November. They've made bulbs and will go in the fridge soon. If yours were sown this month, they'll probably need until maybe end of Feb to make little bulbils before going in the fridge (but keep an neye on them, as they may catch up fast on my earlier sowing).
Hope someone sees this.Are these bulbils big enough to now go into the fridge?I don't have a clue.
I've checked mine which were sown in late Autumn and the bulbils are only a little bigger than yours, so I'd say you could put them in the fridge now if you want to, or another week just to let them add a little more bulk if they can wouldn't hurt. Either way, they've caught up fast with my autum n sown martagon seed and are more or less ready for the fridge.
I agree with Martin. they still look smallish - I would keep them one or two weeks. However, they would probably survive even now.I would think that an indication is whether the seed looks exhausted or not.Göte
Göte, not sure what you mean by whether the seed looks exhausted.How can you tell?
Cris, L. philadelphicum is very difficult. Seed germination is unpredictable and irregular, and the plants grow very slowly and have low survival rates. It is very strange, because in nature they grow in a wide range of conditions.
I had recently read an article on raising delayed hypogeal seedlings. The writer has germinated the seed as usual and then, instead of refrigerating them, he placed them on a layer of sphagnum and gave them light and lots of water. They grew away through the Summer and were them allowed to go dormant. Apparently he managed to save an entire season with this method. I am going to try it with some L. superbum seed that is currently plumping-up, but on perlite, as sphagnum is a protected species in Germany. You may not collect it.