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Anita! Thank you so much for your link. My graecum are right now dormant. They have developed as you say cherry sized bulbs. They look health and alive. However their leaves dried up. I've kept the pot in the window sill, reasonably dry and I'm wondering what to do next. I've got a very dry cool summer here. (max 30ºC in the highs just a few days in summer). Our lows in winter average -1ºC/-3ºC. Occasionaly I might have -6º C in winter. Would you place the pot outside to get winter chill? Perhaps sunk in and with some leave's mulching (under an english oak)?. From what I gather each Cyclamen has a partially different life cycle and I'm trying to figure out each . Thanks so muchArturo
Anita! Thank you. I've got a good picture of how to go about my hardy cyclamens. Thus with no local source of experience I'm checking out the world at large. I've just only started learning with them. Arturo
I'm not sure that C graecum's 'contractile' roots are contractile in the sense the term is used when discussing true bulbs where the roots actually 'pull' the bulb down to the correct depth. In graecum's case I think they are more accurately anchor roots to hold the tuber firmly in the often rocky ground it grows in. They grow long to seek out water deep within the soil/rocks. In cultivation, if I plant a young tuber at soil level I can't ever recall it being pulled down to a lower depth over subsequent years. Of course, in the wild there may be some root contraction and expansion going on as the plant responds to dessication over the summer and then rain in the autumn.