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Finally spring is slowly reaching us.Today and tomorrow the weather is going to be around -5 at night
Mr. Lambert,Thank you for sharing the story concerning Prunus cerasus 'Schaarbeekse'. Very interesting.
Kris, it is the same here, still cold nights, but it is nice to see, that there are plants which can cope with that. You have a very pretty Adonis. For some reason, I have lost almost all my Bulbocodium last year, maybe they didn't like the very dry and hot summer, I'm not sure.
Both very beautiful
I planted years ago an orchard with old varieties of plums, pears & apples. Unfortunately I lost the plan of the orchard, but anyway, most trees are mislabeled in the nurseries so that in the end you still don't know what you have planted.Anyway, in particular for pears many of the old varieties were wild seedlings found in nature and the variety was often named after the finder. Quite famous over here is the'Légipont' pear, found in a hedge by Mr Légipont. This pear was at the origin of a thriving industry of apple/pear syrup near Liège.I continued this tradition when I found two seedlings on the courtyard when we bought the house, and I transplanted them to the orchard.One is a weak growing tree producing masses of rather small fruits very similar to the Conference pear.The other one looks very promising, is more vigorously growing and gives very late in the season large delicious pears. We had our first fruits last year.Of course, both trees were named by us, this one with larger fruits we call 'Duchesse de Kwatem'. Duchesse after one of our cats, Kwatem because that's the geographic name of our place.And the tree is flowering for his second year, much more flowers of course than last year, mostly on the higher branches, but that is very normal for seedling trees compared to grafted trees. When a new variety is started from a seedling they always take grafting material from at least 3 meter high in the tree. Lower branches tend to be spiny and less productive.