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Did not see it in flower in Mid-march 1961 , when Sir Frederick and Lady Stern invited me for lunch at 'Highdown', but was thrilled to find a clump of Iris winogradowii in flower in the garden - the first time I saw this species . Lady Stern collected me at the station , i think it was Goring by the Sea , in her Rolls -Royce , and lunch was served by a butler - not your daily routine in Australia - but it was enjoyable ,as was the tour around the garden, nice memories .
Dear Lesley , it is time that you acknowledge my place in society - but no need to worship me Otto.
Quote from: Otto Fauser on April 02, 2009, 11:08:02 PMDear Lesley , it is time that you acknowledge my place in society - but no need to worship me Otto. Really, Otto .... we are not worthy.....
Paul,Sound advice, in Greece the most floriferous Hermodactylus were growing in sunny woodland margins, I imagine therefoere they get a stable input of nutrients plus good light levels!
In Highdown Gardens they are growing in what was originally a large chalk pit, fairly close to one wall. It's pretty hot with good light but I can't imagine the nutrient levels are all that high naturally. I don't know whether they are fed.
Here in Bulgaria my Hermodayctylus are growing and flowering in lime chippings near my cess pit in full sun, I guess as long as conditions are somewhere near suitable they will flower. In the UK, though they grew well for me in Lincolnshire, I never could flower them, they had the nutrients and were on a south facing wall. The Highdown Garden examples you mention as growing are I assume flowering also? Could it be that they receive nutrients from any run off the chalk pit receives from the surrounding area?