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Author Topic: Fritillaria 2009  (Read 74635 times)

gote

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #390 on: June 02, 2009, 09:18:35 AM »
Tried to post this yeasterday but got an error message.
Anyway: i agree with Lesley that F, camtschatkensis can be a weed. I grow it never the less.
Dark form - which is plentiful, yellow form which is not so prolific and a double that barely survives and last flowered nine years ago.
Göte
« Last Edit: June 02, 2009, 09:20:19 AM by gote »
Göte Svanholm
Mid-Sweden

olegKon

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #391 on: June 03, 2009, 10:35:49 PM »
Nice frits, Magnar and Gote!
Some are still blooming here:
1.Fr. messanensis gracilis with 6 flowers a stem this year
2.Fr. alfredae glaucoviridis
3.Fr. cirrosa (end of flowering)
4.Fr.pontica
in Moscow

Gerry Webster

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #392 on: June 03, 2009, 10:47:43 PM »
Very nice Oleg. Your F. pontica is much darker in colour than any I have seen before. Frits obviously do well in Moscow. Are they all growing in the open garden?
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olegKon

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #393 on: June 04, 2009, 07:46:27 PM »
They are, Gerry. We can't have an alpine house here as winters are too cold. Those which need dry summer are dug up after leaves become yellow for dry storage in sand.
in Moscow

Sinchets

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #394 on: June 05, 2009, 08:43:35 AM »
Very nice Oleg. Your F. pontica is much darker in colour than any I have seen before. Frits obviously do well in Moscow. Are they all growing in the open garden?
Gerry, the F.ponticawe see in the wild here are very variable in clour and some are very dark as the flowers are 'going-over'. I am sure the specimens  in western Europe only represent a small sample of the different forms that could be found in the wild.
Simon
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Stara Planina, Bulgaria. Altitude 482m.
Lowest winter (shade) temp -25C.
Highest summer (shade) temp 35C.

Gerry Webster

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #395 on: June 05, 2009, 11:18:42 AM »
Simon - now you mention it I remember that some specimens of F. pontica do darken with age. I didn't see it this year since my plants collapsed from wilt before they had a chance to age.
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Sinchets

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #396 on: June 05, 2009, 11:41:18 AM »
Gerry, it would be interesting to know where in the range of F.pontica the original plants we have in cultivation now were collected from, and also if the population there is as variable as it is here in Bulgaria. Given how quickly F.pontica can bulk up, I imagine it wouldn't take long for a few original bulbs to bulk up to an extent where it is possible that most of the garden ones are derived from only a few wild bulbs.
Simon
Balkan Rare Plant Nursery
Stara Planina, Bulgaria. Altitude 482m.
Lowest winter (shade) temp -25C.
Highest summer (shade) temp 35C.

Gerry Webster

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #397 on: June 05, 2009, 04:08:27 PM »
I agree it would be interesting Simon, but possibly quite difficult to find out. The photo in Rix & Phillips The Bulb Book is of a plant collected on Ulu Dag, Turkey. I recall  a plant  being distributed in the UK many years ago as the 'Prasil Form'. Since  Milan Prasil collected in Eastern Europe this may have been the source of  another clone or strain. I suspect there may have been several other introductions.
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Sinchets

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #398 on: June 05, 2009, 04:45:05 PM »
Thanks Gerry, I didn't know that. I have F.pontica from 3 sources. The first from a garden centre- so I suppose originally from Holland; the second was bought as F.pontica substipulata, but seems to be straight F.pontica; and the third, bought from Janis, collected in central Bulgaria. Hopefully in a few years we will have more collected as seed on our travels.
Simon
Balkan Rare Plant Nursery
Stara Planina, Bulgaria. Altitude 482m.
Lowest winter (shade) temp -25C.
Highest summer (shade) temp 35C.

olegKon

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #399 on: June 10, 2009, 06:43:24 PM »
Last frittilarias this year
1.Fritillaria camchtcensis flavescens
2.Fritillaria camchatcensis multiflora
in Moscow

Lesley Cox

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #400 on: June 10, 2009, 10:00:17 PM »
The yellow form is very nice indeed. :)
Lesley Cox - near Dunedin, lower east coast, South Island of New Zealand - Zone 9

Paul T

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #401 on: June 11, 2009, 07:04:48 AM »
Oleg,

That flavescens form is beautiful.  Is the multiflora a double flowered variety?
Cheers.

Paul T.
Canberra, Australia.
Min winter temp -8 or -9°C. Max summer temp 40°C. Thankfully, maybe once or twice a year only.

olegKon

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #402 on: June 11, 2009, 01:57:18 PM »
Yes, it is, Paul. Flowers are double. Unfortunately out of the 3 forms of Fr.camchatcensis I grow this one shows the greatest reluctance to flower and multiply.
in Moscow

gote

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #403 on: June 12, 2009, 08:11:15 AM »
Yes, it is, Paul. Flowers are double. Unfortunately out of the 3 forms of Fr.camchatcensis I grow this one shows the greatest reluctance to flower and multiply.
Exactly my experience. The normal one is a near weed, the yellow multiplies but modestly and the double one barely survives. There are red forms in Japan. has anybody seen them??
Göte
Göte Svanholm
Mid-Sweden

arisaema

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Re: Fritillaria 2009
« Reply #404 on: June 12, 2009, 08:28:48 AM »
Searching the Japanese name (クロユリ) in Google Images shows a lot of nice forms in orange, yellow, black and reddish brown, but nothing redder than this.

 


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