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Quote from: Gerry Webster on March 03, 2008, 08:27:06 PMArmin, Are the colours in your pics reasonably accurate? If they are, then what I grow as 'Ruby Giant' (obtained more than 15 years ago & not all that big) is more like your 'Whitewell Purple' (true). To add to the confusion, my form has white tubes. Gerry, I admit the picture of "Ruby Giant" was taken in full sunshine and my digicam made it a bit too reddish. In reality it is more purple. But it is definitively different in color and size compared to "whitewell purple" and C.tommasianus. The flowers are steril and I think you are right they are a hybrid with C.vernus. My "Giants" have a darker stem too.
Armin, Are the colours in your pics reasonably accurate? If they are, then what I grow as 'Ruby Giant' (obtained more than 15 years ago & not all that big) is more like your 'Whitewell Purple' (true). To add to the confusion, my form has white tubes.
Diane - a great start for a crocus lawn - looks like my own lawn 7 years ago. Advance is a very small cultivar - I also have some on my lawn, but it is too small to be seen well in the grass.Negro Boy is always the last cultivar coming into flower in my garden - it's not to late for yours!
Quote from: tonyg on March 04, 2008, 08:14:12 PMI think we may be being fooled Thomas - I see both wide and narrow leaves in the pic. Is this a mixed planting? Also Dubrovnic is mentioned for the location which is coastal ... I think of vernus as a mountain species. The way the outer petals have opened leaving the inner ones more upright suggests tommasinianus to me.Tony the few small leaves I see, seem to grow in a nearby pot.
I think we may be being fooled Thomas - I see both wide and narrow leaves in the pic. Is this a mixed planting? Also Dubrovnic is mentioned for the location which is coastal ... I think of vernus as a mountain species. The way the outer petals have opened leaving the inner ones more upright suggests tommasinianus to me.
Armin, Gerry,Mine with dark tubes and bought as 'Ruby Giant' (probably Dutch bulbs) match Armin's description as well as Luit's photo. They are also sterile, clearly larger than my other tommasinianus forms, and have a distinct look of vernus about them. I'd agree that they are very likely a hybrid.
(probably bought in Woolworths - a good source of bulbs in years gone by)
Quote from: Martin Baxendale on March 03, 2008, 05:12:20 PMLuit, in my copy of Collins Guide To Bulbs, by Patrick Synge (1961) it says 'Whitewell Purple' is "Named after the rectory where Rev. Joseph Jacob collected together so many unusual and good plants. Flower purplish-mauve outside, pale silvery-mauve inside. " There are also short descriptions for 'Taplow Ruby' and 'Barr's Purple' if you want those too.Thank you Martin, I do have the book.But with these colour descriptions you wouldn't come far.To quote P. Synge: QuoteFl. purplish-mauve,but not quite so deep in colour although bluer than the preceeding (Taplow Ruby) .And for Taplow Ruby he gives: Dark rich reddish-purple, probably the deepest coloured form.I cannot find any blue in this description.So my question is: how blue is his or your or mine blue? Blue in sunny weather or blue in rainy weather or blue after a long evening in the pub?And then we have Mr. Mathew; Ruby Giant (red-purple, Taplow Ruby ( the deepest reddish purple)What's the difference?Shortly, what I mean is that the people writing these book probably never saw all the plants they write about.
Luit, in my copy of Collins Guide To Bulbs, by Patrick Synge (1961) it says 'Whitewell Purple' is "Named after the rectory where Rev. Joseph Jacob collected together so many unusual and good plants. Flower purplish-mauve outside, pale silvery-mauve inside. " There are also short descriptions for 'Taplow Ruby' and 'Barr's Purple' if you want those too.
Fl. purplish-mauve,but not quite so deep in colour although bluer than the preceeding (Taplow Ruby)
Going back to the discussion on page 2 of this thread, although I don't have tommies in named patches nowadays, only a general mix, when I first bought them, way back in the 1960s, from Van Tubergen in Holland, the ones with PURPLE in their name like 'Barr's Purple' and 'Whitewell Purple' did tend to be straight purple, if you know what I mean, while the ones with RUBY in their name, 'Taplow Ruby' and 'Ruby Giant' were toward the red end of purple, as one might expect.
Not sure if this helps or hinders but here are a couple of pictures I posted last year of what I bought as Whitewell Purple but the balance of opinion on the Forum suggested they were Ruby Giant (OR did I amend my file name later and originally posted Ruby Giant but the balance of opinion suggested they were Whitewell Purple)??