Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Rivers of gold and silver flowing in Aberdeen!Well done, Ian!Your cobblestone bed looks like it is working at keeping the bulbs safe from varmintscheersfermi
Ian, thank you for making the Weekly bulb log. It is a real pleasure reading them!The blue striped "Crocus biflorus" in bulb log 11 looks very similar to Crocus abantensis Azkabans Escapee from Janis Ruksans.Poul
My thanks too, Ian. I have just managed to germinate Tropaeolum azureum for the first time. I was not sure what to do with it next, so read all your bulblog entries and made some notes. It stands a better chance of surviving now. The seed came from the seedex and was sown in January at 20C, germinating after about 6 or 7 weeks. So far, 2 out of 6 seeds have germinated, which, after reading the bulblog, seems to be quite a good result. I was surprised to read that you leave the seeds outside in the cold. I would have expected this to be a warm germinator. Like you, I have often (well, always) had nothing germinate at all. it would be interesting to hear how other people have got on with these seeds.Thanks again for all your useful experience.
Thanks to Ian we don't even have to go outside to the mailbox to have up to date garden news.The mice here must be better diggers as cobbles don't deter them to dig and eat the corms.Therefore I plant them in 'boxes' made of 6mm mesh.But the stems are often cut by the wind at the level of the wire mainly for small bulbs that can not be planted too deep.Does anyone have a better idea?Ian,your galanthus trough is a bit damaged.Was that done by the frost?How long do they last usually before needing some repair.(min temp. -8°C)
Well done on germinating Tropaeolum azureum.Over the years we have had a lot of problems getting seed to germinate now I just scatter it in the sand beds where it seeds around happily over twenty seedlings are growing in the latest sand bed I converted last summer.Best advice for young seedlings is feed every time you water and keep them growing for a long as possible which may mean keeping them cool in summer! If they get too hot or dry they will immediately go dormant.
..............................A couple of weeks ago I bought a 2 Ltr pot of L. vernum from a local Garden Centre (a surprising purchase opportunity?) and these have also been planted in the garden and are showing about 2" noses.