Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Our “dormant season” is during the summer – July and August for the most part. I am doing what I can bring more flowers into our ornamental garden without using common summertime bedding annuals....
Hi Fermi I share your opinion on the need for prestige of some taxonomists. It's very tiring when monocular genetics constantly gives rise to new classifications of names. Stand firm and use the old names... just like me.✊Your Rhodophiala bifida are stunning. Thanks for showing them.Best regards Thomas ✌️
Hi Fermi I share your opinion on the need for prestige of some taxonomists. It's very tiring when moleculargenetics constantly gives rise to new classifications of names. Stand firm and use the old names... just like me.✊Your Rhodophiala bifida are stunning. Thanks for showing them.Best regards Thomas ✌️
Hi Robert,You might've noticed that there was no "February 2025 in the Southern Hemisphere" thread because it is our main dormant season. Summer bedding annuals take too much water to keep them looking good, so we tend to avoid them. It's been a very hot and dry summer and it's extending into "autumn". Today it reached 37.7oC and we're nearly at the equinox. There a cool change expected tomorrow with a bit of rain - I always say "I'll believe when I see it!" (I'm a curable optimist).Two weeks ago I put the sprinkler on one of the beds and a week later Rhodophiala bifida burst into bloom. Today only one or two flowers are open.Pics from last week: 1-3): a hybrid swarm between the blood-red form and the orangey-red form.4-5): The dark-red or "Ox Blood" form which has overtaken the orangey-red one in "commerce" - no one really sells Rhodophiala in any huge number, it's only available from bulb specialists.And don't tell me this is now a Zephyranthes - I think the taxonomists are getting drunk on power and I won't re-label these for at least 10 years because it could easily be shifted back!cheersfermi
Hi Fermi,It is nice to see your autumn bulbs coming into bloom. Spring is arriving here in our part of Northern California. The first of the Dipterostemon capitatus ssp. capitatus are coming into bloom now. Triteleia laxa is not far behind. Slow but steady progress is being made developing new and hopefully superior forms. This year I will be evaluating selections of Triteleia bridgesii and making appropriate crosses. I believe this species has great potential. It just requires some time and effort – something I enjoy doing. I will be posting Themidaceae photographs as the season progresses, as well as reporting on any new results and findings.
fermi & Leucogenes,I share your opinion. I have long believed that there should be 2 separate phylogenies: one for academia and one for horticulture.The horticultural phylogeny should change only when academic changes are horticulturally useful.
Hi Marc,that's an interesting viewpoint - how do we get it recognised by the Taxonomic Council? ......
... 30 years ago I was told, by the local experts, that Erythroniums, as well as other species, were impossible to grow in Sacramento. Today, some Erythronium species have become almost weedy in our garden. With continued research and effort a highly diverse group of ultra-heat tolerant, easy-to-grow species selections, and interspecific hybrids are continuing to be developed for our Sacramento garden. Gardeners with similar climatic conditions or those concerned about the impacts of climatic change on their gardens might be interested. I will be posting results and new findings as time permits.