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Quote from: Alan_b on February 26, 2009, 08:33:03 AM"Amy Jade" looks to be a nice-enough snowdrop but I do not see anything distinctive about it. How would I pick it out of a line-up of other G. plicatus snowdrops?I can see something distinctive about it straight away compared to a lot of plicatus varieties - it looks healthy and vigorous.
"Amy Jade" looks to be a nice-enough snowdrop but I do not see anything distinctive about it. How would I pick it out of a line-up of other G. plicatus snowdrops?
Quote from: Martin Baxendale on February 26, 2009, 10:55:45 AMQuote from: Alan_b on February 26, 2009, 08:33:03 AM"Amy Jade" looks to be a nice-enough snowdrop but I do not see anything distinctive about it. How would I pick it out of a line-up of other G. plicatus snowdrops?I can see something distinctive about it straight away compared to a lot of plicatus varieties - it looks healthy and vigorous. Martin, here's a field full of healthy vigorous plicatus varieties. Where shall we start? Amy Janet extreme left? Next to her Amy Jane, then Amy Jenny ...? I don't mean to offend the person who named "Amy Jade" but my question about what makes it distinctive is a valid question.
Hello,Could somebody help a novice Galanthophil with identification?First: applanate leaves, glaucous with a slight white midrib - received as John Gray:Second: plicate leavesAny suggestions would be welcome!