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I think in this case "crazy" is crazy = wow, great ! That's a really good plant!
I don't have experience with cyclamen flowers, mine are still just seedlings, but I have been also sceptical about very early Galanthus when there is a lot of snow and winter lasts forever. Then snowdrops start to flower under snow. We have had couple of good winters with not so much snow, this winter I don't know yet. After the snowy winters I decided that late snowdrops are best to grow here but now after the early springs also early snowdrops have had time to settle and maybe they will cope better with also snowy winters, only time will tell.
Yes Maggi! and Robert - I meant 'crazy how nice it is' More of a fuchsia colour, but I don't want to start a discussion on this direction I am glad that you do propagate it.
I think it's 1950s American, Robert - jive talk, like, that's crazy, man!
Ralph,I am willing to bet that this is correct.Somehow from an early age I became disconnected from many, but not all, facets of Americana. My wife is the daughter of immigrants - Norway for the most part. She speaks German, Spanish, English, and can get by in other languages. Somehow I can relate to the farmer characters in the BBC series All Creatures Great and Small, if this makes any sense. Not that I understand Scotland any better than the U.S.A.When I was young I kept company with the local farmers such as Mr. Barrett and his wife. Later one of my best friends was Kyoko - from pre-1945 Japan. Now my wife and I keep company with the Tibetan Buddhist Monks.Maybe this explains my disconnect with American culture? Anyway I hope everything is settled and okay.
Robert, the Forum is a great place for language expansion. For me, that would be "gobsmacked" and "bandjaxed", not to mention " moreish".