Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Thanks for your comments related to crocus niveus.Another further question.Crocus niveus under cold glass vegetate all the winter and spring and forms very huge tulip-sized corms (if planted in big pots). In garden, as far as I understand, it can overwinter under snow cover withour leaf damage and continue to vegetate in spring keeping on forming and growing its replacement corms. Am I right?
What a wonderful trip, Janis. Today I found a strange Crocus kotschyanus: It flowered last week and today I found, that the leavesare already 5cm long. Have you ever seen such a kotschyanus? The corms came from a 1989 collectionmade by Helmut Kerndorff in the Eastern Adana region. Since that time they were cultivated in his garden,perhaps it's just a hybrid, but the flower looked like 100% kotschyanus. Sorry, I have no photo because I thought it's just a simple kotschyanus, before I found the leaves.
Quote from: Thomas Huber on November 05, 2009, 01:38:33 PMWhat a wonderful trip, Janis. Today I found a strange Crocus kotschyanus: It flowered last week and today I found, that the leavesare already 5cm long. Have you ever seen such a kotschyanus? The corms came from a 1989 collectionmade by Helmut Kerndorff in the Eastern Adana region. Since that time they were cultivated in his garden,perhaps it's just a hybrid, but the flower looked like 100% kotschyanus. Sorry, I have no photo because I thought it's just a simple kotschyanus, before I found the leaves.I too have a similar Crocus kotschyanus collection. Today there is one flower, leafless but the three corms which flowered earlier have leaves about 5cm long now. Perhaps variation that goes un-noticed in the wild ... we are looking for flowers and the leaves after flowers would be easily missed, especially in grassy places, grass long and green in autumn. Possible though that this is a feature of cultivation away from the wild places, with warm, wet weather after flowering encouraging early leaf development.
Speaking of early growth, I've got some pots of C. baytopiorum which are already coming up, quite well developed too with buds clearly visible. In fact, a few things seem early this year, perhaps it's the very mild Autumn we're having so far.Alex
By the way: Great photos of Crocus nerimaniae. Must try to get some seeds of this wonderful species in future.