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Hi Lesley,Yes, the best way if you want ot 'repeat' Alans results will be to buy his recorded pod parent bee pollinated material, grow them to flowering size and cross onto fertile danfordiae. We now have several hundred seedlings from McMurtrie seed which represent the work he had undertaken upto the mid 1990's I think,we are now buying and bulking up ferile danfordiae ready to make these crosses in the hope of achieving some of those distinctive colours.All good clean fun!!!
True Janis, though there are financial implications for some of us when an unusual colour form costs 25 euros per bulb.Taking that 'step back' allows for some quantity to play with. Current indications here are that there isevery chance of shaving a year or two off the germination to first flower period. Maybe 3 to 4 years instead ofthe 5 years experienced by Alan. Current experience here also suggests that direct sowing of reticulata seed into theopen garden generates a much higher germination rate than pot sowing.Would be great to here from anyone with experience of growing reticulatas from seed in Southern Europe.
In the case of the pale blue, just 3 of 24 seeds and the second two flowered the following year, a light blue, not so close to white as this one. In the other case, the one with rain on, 15 of 25 germinated, just 3 the first year then a few more over the next two years. Eight flowered this last spring, much the same but a couple bluer and a couple closer to purple. All lovely though and very fragrant. Two made seed pods on their first flowering. Those are sown but not yet up.