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Steve, you are on the slippery slope
Steve, rest easy - it is perfectly possible to admire snaadreeps and even garner a few to your garden, without succumbing to the potentially lethal galanthomania. I am confident about this , because I have remained unsullied over many years, while a large number of my dear friends are hopelessly smitten with these plants and the accompanying syndrome.Naturally, I have taken an interest, partly to know what the Chums are on about and partly because of my forum reading "duty" - but, even though I love to see snowdrops in the garden, can admire a fine potful and might even acquire the odd one or six - I am resolutely not a galanthophile, cannot tell what any of them are, and still maintain they are all the same.
Thanks for the reassurance, Maggi! Like you I don't get too excited about the small differences between many of the varieties although there was a pot of Sophie North (?) I saw at one of the SRGC/AGS shows that I thought was absolutely stunning. Different strokes for different folks. I wouldn't mind building up a small collection of the different species though...
Is it because they relate more directly to people that gardeners tend to resist being drawn in? They lack the sort of scientific objectivity of studying and growing natural species?
Time after time here we read that the marks on a 'drop are less than stable - and if the "difference" of that 'drop is defined by such fugitive marks and this happens so often, then I think this itself breeds resistance in some of us to get drawn into something so clearly amorphous. While the drops themselves may be lovely, why would one get obsessive about something that has little or no stability, and which, in too many cases, proves to have no stamina or vigour in the garden?
........ but there are old varieties like 'John Gray' which are real classic snowdrops and which I for one haven't been able to establish in the garden, but keep on trying (why? - it's a sort of stubborness I suppose, a bit like what happens to people who collect crocus )..