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Jaime, it's interesting to see Galanthus growing in Portugal!Do you know if there are any wild poplations exist in your country?Gerd
I have been studying the Wikipedia map recently https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galanthus#/media/File:Distribution_of_the_galanthus_species.png . According to this, snowdrops (nivalis) just cross the border between France and Spain but have not got near to Portugal. But perhaps there are naturalised populations as here in the UK?
Thank you for your reply Jaime!I found Galanthus nivalis near Valdelinares/Teruel, which is quite south and far from the French border. So it would not be totally unimaginable to expect an occurence in Portugal. The site in Spain mentioned above is still poorly known and maybe there will be further places on the Iberian peninsula for this species.Gerd
My next step is to buy species known to do well in drier areas, Like reginae-olgae or peshmenii that some members already told me about. But The truth is I would like to try every single species! Jaime
Those are good news, that part of Spain is drier than here in western Portugal, that means with the right soil, some shade and plenty of leaf mulch they might survive and maybe actually even thrive. I don't know of any known place with wild Galanthus in this country, and as we are smaller than Spain, botanists know the country very well, so probably is pretty certain that they do not exist wild in here. My next step is to buy species known to do well in drier areas, Like reginae-olgae or peshmenii that some members already told me about. But The truth is I would like to try every single species!
Hi Jaime,Central Victoria is quite hot and dry in summer with rain and frost in winter; Galanthus elwesii is the one that does the best here so might be worth trying in Lisboacheersfermi