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Incidentally, has anyone had much experience of twin scaling woronowii? I ask because I haven't, and I read on John Grimshaw's blog last year (in relation to a certain yellow) that it doesn't respond well to the procedure. I have an unusual one, of which I'll post some pictures elsewhere shortly, and whilst I intend to try some common woronowii this year to see what happens, I wondered if anyone else had tried it?
My question is which fungicide is used?
I have been to talks on twin-scaling where at this juncture it emerges that the speaker uses a fungicide that has been withdrawn from sale and/or is only available to agriculturalists. So well-done Richard for nominating something you actually can get hold of.
Has anybody had the experience that bulbs produced through chipping/twin-scaling have afterwards been very slow to multiply in the garden, oftentimes remaining as a single bulb for many years?
Has anybody had the experience that bulbs produced through chipping/twin-scaling have afterwards been very slow to multiply
I had a comparison of like-with-like when I posed the question above - a chipped bulb planted in the same conditions as the original bulbs not thriving at all while the original one have gone on to big numbers.
RichardThank you for sharing this information on the Bayer systhane fungus fighter. I think the pictures of your on-growing potted up chips convince me that it “works”.AlanI have also experience the situation that you describe … the speaker recommends withdrawn products or products not generally available. So thanks Richard.
I have in last summer ( august 2012) repeatedly cut with a knife, a medium size galanthus bulb ( Trympostor). I then potted this and now i have them planted in the ground.It has become eight small bulbs, without chemicals and hormones.I'm happy!