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Nothing special, but seed grown over the last few years: Arisaema jacquemontii (left), consanguineum (middle), propinquum (right)
And it's Arisaema yamatense v. sugimotoi time again in Ken's garden. A very lusty aroid. One of the oldest clumps in the city just a block away easily reaches 1.3m or more. This species was grown from seed by Philip MacD in the 90's and generously spread around amongst lucky friends.john
Gabriela - Glad to hear the "baby" is doing well. You will soon have plenty.Yesterday Ken saw an A. speciousum just getting ready to flower in a garden, a dark flower - mayebarae perhaps. I was quite surprised as I had assumed it was tender.It might be wise some year to hold sugimotoi back and then plant so it flowers later and with other species in the hope they get up to some mischief.Are you growing griffithii?john
I too await a Thimle Farm A. sazensoo and a few other rather pricey ones.......the weather has been so cool, 5c this morning.john
5C - that's really extreme!!! Not so cold here but 4 hail storms in the last two days!
Why the Scot's stayed, made great wool sweaters and Scotch. It's a nice damp cool you see. Meconopsis having their best year, P. mloko's been ion flower since Victoria Day, surely a record for here.Hope there's no hail damage with you.john - @ +12c.
I think there are a lot of infected tubers offered for sale.It even happened with sazensoo tubers (from Fraser's Thimble).
You're quite correct Gabriela and a few gardening friends agree - something terribly wrong with Fraser Thimble's A. sazensoo tubers. Everyone has lost them, up and collapsing and rotting just as rooting. All are experienced Arisaema growers. Giot fed up waiting for mine to surface today, so slowly removed soil only to find a tuber of slop. I'll let them know, they're pretty co-operative.john
A few years ago, I ordered ten tubers of Arisaema nepenthoides from Gardenimport. All had advanced shoot growth, and major fungal infections when they arrived, and I lost the lot (managed to salvage a single tiny side growth from the last tuber before it rotted away). These tubers apparently were coming from India, and suffered badly in transit. Gardenimport made good on the lot, but ceased business two years later.