Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
I've tried that for ten minutes, Anne, I'm dreaming of hellebores!
President Ian has shown these photos on the old Forum, so I'm reposting them here, to be handy!Fred' Giant clump (Attachment Link) Fred's Giant closer (Attachment Link)
Here is one of my poculiform elwesii.
I don't think the tubby bit was meant in the same as chubby or fat, but in reference to its shorter stature.
Martin, I mean no disrespect to your dear Mother, but if that is what she meant,"but in reference to its shorter stature" she perhaps meant to say the word "stubby" !! Quite right, Maggi, and she may well have meant something more like that. It was just a throw-away comment on my Mum's part, not something thought out or intended to become a name, and she was surprised when it started being passed around with that name. Indeed, snowdrops are often named on an impulse because someone in a group looking at it comes up with a quick quip or offhand observation that's jumped on and used as a name (snowdrop parties sometimes involve a drink or two!).I found time just now to look at my snowdrop seed pots with a torch. My first foray into the garden all day! Very, very, very slow germination - almost nothing showing, which is a first for this time of year. Except for the autumn snowdrops, the reginae-olgae seedlings and crosses, all up as normal. I wonder if the shortage of cold weather this winter means the snowdrop seeds haven't had enough cold spells to stimulate germination? I guess that wouldn't worry the autumn reginae-olgae types, which (as in the adult bulbs) are probably more stimulated by cool and wet rather than sharp cold? Whatever, I may have to resort to putting them in the fridge (if my wife will let me!) Otherwise I'll have very little to show this year for all my pollination last year.