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is it true there are over 600 named galanthus, if so that is funny and I like the damn things. Pat.
Quote from: cycnich on February 27, 2010, 09:50:35 PM is it true there are over 600 named galanthus, if so that is funny and I like the damn things. Pat.From what I've heard, it's more like 1,500 named snowdrops - a great, great many of them no doubt not worthy of being named.
....Now how to treat it from now until next autumn is the question? Damp, barely damp under the bulb or dry.
Paddy, Mini Me is in a trough.
Quote from: johnw on February 27, 2010, 11:39:03 PM....Now how to treat it from now until next autumn is the question? Damp, barely damp under the bulb or dry.I have seen snowdrop bulbs (often newly formed offsets) that 'take a year off' without producing any visible growth yet appear as normal the following year. So my feeling is that there is no reason to vary your normal growing conditions.
Now how to treat it from now until next autumn is the question? Damp, barely damp under the bulb or dry.johnw
Alan - Don't you think with no roots at all I should keep the bulb out of the general watering regime and with just enough moisture to prevent shrinking (between now and September)? I also thought about re-lifting and severing that tiny offset in August if I can do that without damaging it, it may not come off with its own basal plate.johnw
Quote from: Martin Baxendale on February 27, 2010, 11:25:24 PMQuote from: cycnich on February 27, 2010, 09:50:35 PM is it true there are over 600 named galanthus, if so that is funny and I like the damn things. Pat.From what I've heard, it's more like 1,500 named snowdrops - a great, great many of them no doubt not worthy of being named.But the point is, I can walk down to the woods, pick a 'wild' snowdrop at random and call it "Fred", and that would be another named snowdrop. So what? It doesn't mean that the snowdrop called Fred has any intrinsic merit (except in my eyes) and it doesn't mean anybody else would want it. In a way the ridiculously large number of named snowdrops is a good thing because it makes it impossible to "collect the set" so one is forced to discriminate. Only a few people suffer, mainly those few people who are trying to write a book about them all!
What beginners like me need is a little help from the group of experts on here whos collective knowledge is vast. Because it is such a minefield how about you guys posting a few pictures of some of your favourite plants that are really distinct and telling us novices why you would not want to be without it. Try to stick to things that are not too hard to get hold of as I realise the new and rare stuff gets passed around among the top growers for a few years before it becomes widely available and rightly so.
Quote from: cycnich on February 28, 2010, 09:29:15 AMWhat beginners like me need is a little help from the group of experts on here whos collective knowledge is vast. Because it is such a minefield how about you guys posting a few pictures of some of your favourite plants that are really distinct and telling us novices why you would not want to be without it. Try to stick to things that are not too hard to get hold of as I realise the new and rare stuff gets passed around among the top growers for a few years before it becomes widely available and rightly so. Try this thread for a start. http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=2756.0 Thanks John for the link, I have around 30% of the top 20 so I must be doing something right.If you do some searches on SRGC you should find other such lists if I am remembering correctly.
............What I find hard to accept is that as soon as a plant is named its value doubles, give it a pc or an am and you can double it again and it seems galanthus get more awards from the joint rock than a lot of other plants maybe I am wrong.
The best way to decide what snowdops you like is to visit some gardens where they are growing; there is still time this year. Find some that catch your eye, if possible talk to the garden owner about how rare (and therefore pricey) they are and how easy they are to grow.