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A few scenes from our Sacramento, California garden before I get busy again.One of my best deciduous azalea hybrids. It is part of a grex that we call 'Tatiana'. Its growth is very compact, about 1 meter in 20 years. Very floriferous!Another one of my hybrid azaleas. Nothing to get excited about, but I keep it anyway. I no longer have space to breed azaleas, so all the azalea breeding lines in our garden are a dead end. This does not bother me, I have plenty of other creative breeding projects to work on.
Good Luck! I have also germinated many seeds of various Calochortus species, but wasn't willing to coddle them over winter, and they resided in my "pot box" outside that seems to be a half zone warmer than my normal winter. Never had any of them survive a winter. Claude Barr tried very hard with Calochortus, and even with heavy mulches, wasn't successful. He surmised that the bulbs couldn't tolerate freezing temperatures.
I know that C. tolmiei is out of question to grow here but I will give it a try with C. leichtlinii. Like Robert mentioned, it often grows at high altitude.There must be few Calochortus species that can tolerate freezing - for example I don't see any reason we couldn't grow C. apiculatus which I saw it flowering last summer high up in the Lizard Ranges in SE BC.
There must be few Calochortus species that can tolerate freezing
(Attachment Link) Hi Trond,There is plenty of snow in the Sierra Nevada Mountains too......................
Freezing nights seem to be over now, and everything has started to grow.Some pictures from yesterday.
Gabriela, I saw lots of Calochortus macrocarpus growing in the B.C. Interior. Gerritsen and Parsons wrote this about it:In the wild, Calochortus macrocarpus thrives in extreme conditions - cold down to - 35C, heat to 43C, and less than 38 cm of rain most years.
Lovely to see ALL the spring flowers blooming together, while in the UK they are spread out over 3 - 4 months. I'm sure you must savour every moment now that winter seems to be over.