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the late Christabel Beck ,of Fritillaries Book fame , so rather 'ancient' .- nice to keep it going .
Every year, when this little beauty blooms, I just cannot help myself and end up waxing lyrically Androcymbium latifolium in a pot far from home: the barren Roggeveld plateau of the Great Karoo.
Mike in Madeira brought up the subject of this plant in another thread some time ago.... and Alberto Castillo replied to him.... I think those posts are of interest here so I copy them below..... From: February 23, 2009, Quote from: Ezeiza re planting depth ....... " 27 cm deep is a great pot for growing most bulb goodies. Babianas, Sparaxis, Androcymbium, Phycella, Leucocoryne, Ungernia, Rhodophialas, Hyeronimiellas, and a number of others all demand depth. "Quote from Mike: "Alberto, I have an Androcymbium latifolium, that I got in December, but it have not sprouted yet. Do you have any ideas to break the dormancy of these corms?And regarding Leucocoryne, how long do the seeds take to sprout? "Quote from: Ezeiza (Alberto C.) " Androcymbium latifolium/pulchrum comes from the semiarid parts of South Africa. When one species skips a season almost always the reason is lack of proper baking during dormancy. Are you growing them too cool? A. latifolium is partial to very gritty, well drained soil. Leucocoryne seed sprouts readily if fresh, in early autumn, not long after sowing. All species need very well drained soils and do best in low humidity climates (this is so with most Central/Northern Chilean species). Seedlings bulbs need deeper planting every year. It is typical that offset bulbs are found much deeper than mother plants.They move deeper and more sideways from mother plants. If the seed you order is maintained under Seed Bank conditions make sure to reserve them and have them delivered just at sowing time. Otherwise all the time the seed is out of the Bank gets older and older until it can no longer be viable. "