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For those who can't grow Rosemary B - the most common snowdrophere in Victoria, and possibly over in Burnaby too, though I haven'tchecked, is elwesii. Old gardens, farms, churchyards - if there aremasses of naturalized snowdrops, they are elwesii, not nivalis.I think the opposite is true in England, from what I have read.Rosemary is an elwesii. It could be our dry summers she is needing.
And if I ever try to grow elwesii's from a garden centre potful they last 2 years at the most.
I also have acid clay soil and find some elwesii 's just dwindle away. For instance Cedric's Prolific and Mandarin both vanished altogether this year. ( Cedric after about 3 or 4 years of trying to be happy ) And if I ever try to grow elwesii's from a garden centre potful they last 2 years at the most.
'Pat Mason' is right Martin
QuoteI also have acid clay soil and find some elwesii 's just dwindle away. For instance Cedric's Prolific and Mandarin both vanished altogether this year. ( Cedric after about 3 or 4 years of trying to be happy ) And if I ever try to grow elwesii's from a garden centre potful they last 2 years at the most.Jo, have you ever tried growing the snowdrops which resent your garden soil in troughs ? (the SRGC obsession with container growing again! ) A fine old stone sink, or even a hypertufa trough can make a comfortable home for snowdrops and allows you to alter the composition of the substrate.