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It's a lovely thing, Paddy.We still don't know why x allenii needs to be monitored?
'John Gray' is out in force in Kent too Anthony.I must admit that I am considering getting rid of it from my garden as it annoys me each year the way it flops everywhere! Last year I moved it so that it was at the edge of a raised bed in the hope that it would fall gracefully over the edge - but nooooo..... it flops ungracefully in the opposite direction.
Also found a new beauty flowering amongst my seedlings that really made my day - supposedly a cross between John Gray and Bertram Anderson, which from the look of it might actually have been a rare successful cross between two triploids, showing characteristics of both parents, plus being incredibly strong and stout. My breeding programme may finally be getting somewhere (an improved, stronger John Gray that doesn't flop over so easily in less-than-ideal situations being one of my prime objectives).
Is the "Daphne's Scissors" definitely correct? I have not seen one with green tips before - though I have only seen it in the flesh half a dozen times so I could easily be wrong.