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Similarly here Janis, where our native black bees are more feisty but better adapted to the climate. Usually I can work them without gloves but rarely without a suit - except when approaching a swarm Crocus banaticus
Afraid that it is some seedling of commercial cultivars of "C. speciosus". Crocus zubovii in type forms must to have striped cataphylls, although not always. I haven't picture of zubovii cataphylls, but they are similar to those of hellenicus (attached here) although in zubovii stripes are not so impressive. Unfortunately not always cataphylls are striped. C. zubovii never was offered commercially and up to now is grown only in few collections of travellers who visited its locality and collected there few corms.
Let's stay at this difficult group. A friend of mine has sent me pictures of two Crocuses today, that he had collected at Kefalonia this year, probably at Enos. I am not sure whether this is Crocus hellenicus or not.
If it belongs to "speciosus" group it is new locality for Greece. On attached map by red dot is marked locus classicus, by brown - another locality from where I have plants but didn't see them in wild, although were there at least 3-4 times, my plants came from Gothenburg BG and from UK, Yellow mark shows the third locality from where it is recorded, but where I didn't found it and didn't see any plant from there, only C. mazziaricus.Green mark used for probably locality on Kefalonia.
Thanks Janis