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Author Topic: Sleeping bulbs  (Read 5741 times)

pehe

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Sleeping bulbs
« on: July 24, 2009, 08:17:24 AM »
I have brought home some bulbs from Malta in spring 2007. It is Urginea maritima and some narcissus. In autumn 2007 the biggest Urginia flowered without leaves as usual, but leaves have never emerged. The bulbs looks healthy (in 2009), but is apparently sleeping.
The same with the narcissus. The bulbs looks healthy, but no leaves or flowers, only roots.
I grow both in a green house in Denmark to simulate the climate in Malta.
Has anybody an explanation what have gone wrong and how do I wake them?

Poul
Poul Erik Eriksen in Hedensted, Denmark - Zone 6

Paul T

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #1 on: July 24, 2009, 09:37:19 AM »
Poul,

Is it possible that by keeping them in a greenhouse you've kept them too warm and they've never got cool enough to trigger growth?  Both Urginea and Narcissus grow in the colder months predominantly, so if they never get cool enough is it possible that they would never start into growth?  Maybe they think it is an endless summer and that they should stay dormant until it ends?  I don't know the climatic seasonal variations in Malta, but I realise somewhat warmer than your own in Denmark, but I am just thinking that the lack of change of seasons within a glasshouse could be the problem?  Of course I may be completely wrong. ???
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.

pehe

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #2 on: July 24, 2009, 10:04:21 AM »
Paul,

Thank you for your answer.
I had the same idea after the first year without leaves, so the next winter I kept them at a temperature just above freezing point, but still no growth.
In Malta the summer is hot and dry. The winter is wet and average temperature is about 8 degrees.

Poul
Poul Erik Eriksen in Hedensted, Denmark - Zone 6

Paul T

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #3 on: July 24, 2009, 01:02:20 PM »
Poul,

Well if you've tried that, then I'm not sure what else to suggest.  It certainly sounds like something in the conditions you're providing is somehow keeping the plants mostly dormant, and not triggering the new growth phase, although given that they are producing roots there is SOME growth triggering going on.  Strange!!

Hopefully someone else here will come up with the answer.  :D
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.

Gerdk

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #4 on: July 24, 2009, 03:25:01 PM »
Poul,
I have no experience with Urginea but daffodils from this area (provided they are the wild growing autumn flowering ones) need a very hot and dry summer rest (best with additional warming during spells of cold weather) followed by decreasing temperatures and watering in autumn - around the beginning of September. I suppose that will suits the Urginea as well.
For the procedure please have a look into   Ian Young's Bulb log  !

Gerd

 
« Last Edit: July 25, 2009, 08:12:12 PM by Maggi Young »
Gerd Knoche, Solingen
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tonyg

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #5 on: July 24, 2009, 03:58:11 PM »
I have had similar experience with several genera.  It may be that the plants need a sudden trigger to initiate growth.  This may be a drop in temperature or the introduction of moisture or the two in combination.  The good news is that they always did grow again although like Gerd I have no experience with Urginea.  Good luck - we look forward to hearing what works!

Renate Brinkers

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #6 on: July 24, 2009, 04:12:28 PM »
The same can happen with Amorphophallus and Hippeastrum, for example I had two pots with five to ten small bulbs of H.petiolatum. I got them dormant last year and planted them. In each of the pots one bulb grows after some weeks, the other ones slept the whole year. I tried it with water, without water, with warm cultivation, with cool cultivation - so success. This spring it happens, nearly from one day to another, that more are growing and in the meantime most of them are green but I can not put my finger on a special change what made them growing.
Also I have some different Amorphophallus. One of them is growing now after 6 month, the others are just sleeping. Until now I only know that they will grow - sooner or later.
Best wishes,
Renate

Gerry Webster

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #7 on: July 25, 2009, 10:04:26 AM »
About 10 years ago Alan Edwards gave me a bulb of a nice form of Sternbergia lutea  which I planted out in a frame bed. In its first year it produced leaves but no flowers & since then has produced neither. I assumed I had lost it but this year I found a small bulb, still alive. About the same time he gave me a bulb of S.clusiana which has behaved in a similar fashion producing leaves for the first time  last year.
I have no idea how one controls the behaviour of these plants.

Gerry passed away  at home  on 25th February 2021 - his posts are  left  in the  forum in memory of him.
His was a long life - lived well.

Paul T

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #8 on: July 25, 2009, 12:28:28 PM »
Anyone who doesn't like strange features like this in bulbs/corms should definitely avoid some of the Moraea species.  I've had bulbs of some of them skip 6 years in a row for now apparent reason.  I've grown more of them from seed and thankfully that means there are enough corms that some of them skipping years doesn't matter in the slightest.  The original pair of corms are still both there last time I checked, but they only ever came up together the first year, and I have had shoots perhaps 4 years out of the last 10.  I assumed until I moved them that I had lost one of the corms, but both corms were there (one now much larger than the other, as it obviously was the one most commonly coming up.  The year I moved them the smaller one came up judging from the shoot, and I haven't disturbed them since so I don't know which one of them has come up since then.  One has surfaced this year (neither came up last year), so at least something is still there.  I have their seedlings flowering for me at the moment though, thankfully.  Very, very strange!  ::)
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.

Rodger Whitlock

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #9 on: July 25, 2009, 06:47:58 PM »
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.
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

David Nicholson

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #10 on: July 25, 2009, 07:43:57 PM »
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.

Just so you can throw up your hands in further despair Rodger according to the Kew checklist it's now Tristagma sellowianum ;D

Late last year or maybe early this year Tony Willis was kind enough to send me a stack of very small bulbils (cormlets?) -if it's any consolation he sticks to Beauverdia sellowiana too!, and having checked that they were winter growers I potted them up in dry compost and intended to leave them until September before watering them. In mid June they sent up shoots without the benefit of water and are now in very healthy growth.
David Nicholson
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pehe

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #11 on: July 27, 2009, 06:56:34 AM »
Gerd, Tony, I will try a really hot summer bake followed by a cooler/wetter period in September to see if that could break dormancy.
Rodger, the temperature was quite low in the first winter, so that could be an explanation of why this long dormancy started.
I have got some usefull advices, thank you all. I will give you a report wether your advises helps(hopefully) or not.

Poul
Poul Erik Eriksen in Hedensted, Denmark - Zone 6

Gerdk

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #12 on: July 27, 2009, 08:01:15 AM »
Poul,
Please go back in this Forum to : Narcissus miniatus and others / Reply # 56 /
October 21, 2008 ****

Sorry for this late advice - I had difficulties to find my own contribution !

Gerd

edit by Maggi: ****See here for Gerd's post : http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=2496.msg59350#msg59350
« Last Edit: July 27, 2009, 01:17:09 PM by Maggi Young »
Gerd Knoche, Solingen
Germany

pehe

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #13 on: July 27, 2009, 11:21:27 AM »
Gerd,
What a good idea to give the pots a black topdressing and place them in black lava to secure an extra hot summer bake.
I will try that.

Poul
Poul Erik Eriksen in Hedensted, Denmark - Zone 6

Jean-Patrick AGIER

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Re: Sleeping bulbs
« Reply #14 on: August 02, 2009, 09:51:58 PM »
Hi Poul,
I'm sorry I don't have any experience on the plants your asked advice for. But I can give 2 different examples:
4 years ago I bought a tropical orchid flower ( holcoglossum kimballianum ). The plant had a flower stem. It never flowered again since this year: I have-at last- a promise of flowers. And I didn't change its cultivation conditions...
5 years ago I purchased a Tropaeolum Beuthii tuber. It grew and flowered ( a little ) only once. The tuber has been repotted recently: still alive and in good health. This species requires a summer dormancy and in spring-apparently-humid& foggy conditions which I certainly haven't been able to give.
Some plants may take a long time ( several years ? ) to acclimatise to the growing conditions we are offering them.
Don't loose hope! and good luck...
Lyon / FRANCE

 


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