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I have a pot of the tetramerous yellow Beauverdia sellowiana originally given to me by Don Elick many years ago. (It's a plant which has been assigned to various genera, including Ipheion, but I throw up my hands in despair at trying to keep up with the botanists and just use the name I received it under.)After one cold winter 10 or so years ago, it refused to start into growth. For some years thereafter, it remained asleep, the number of corms gradually diminishing. Nothing I tried broke its dormancy. A posting on the PBS mailing list (iirc) suggested that some of these South American amaryllids need a fair amount of heat, so one summer I brought the pot into the house and parked it in a sunny window to bake. Within a couple of weeks it was starting to grow and since then I've been careful to protect it against hard freezes.It's as though once exposed to cold, it stays dormant until there is a sure sign that warm (recte, seriously hot) weather has returned. And our summer temperatures here are simply not hot enough.I've seen Ipheion 'Rolf Fiedler' behave in much the same way.