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I thought it was just me in the Alps that had small crocus - my Blue Pearl is tiny but they have all at least come up
It seems that you have same problem as I - crocuses suffered from very long and hard frost this winter because my flowers are very small (in general - with few exceptions - smaller than usually), too. They comes up irregularly, but at least at present I hardly hope they will alive. May be some will be lost but looks that slow spring helps recovering.Janis
Spring has come to Germany - great collection, Armin.But I don't think your biflorus is the cultivar 'Parkinsonii'I'm missing the yellow hint on the petals.
Quote from: Janis Ruksans on March 18, 2010, 05:17:48 AMIt seems that you have same problem as I - crocuses suffered from very long and hard frost this winter because my flowers are very small (in general - with few exceptions - smaller than usually), too. They comes up irregularly, but at least at present I hardly hope they will alive. May be some will be lost but looks that slow spring helps recovering.JanisJanis, this year this was an unusual hard winter. All my croci are grown outside. Many cultivars and specis flowers suffered from hard frost and the flowers are smaller and they appear irregularly, especial those who grow still in shadow. C. imperati is one which had flower buds in January but all withered under long snow cover, similar with C.ancyrensis and C. korolkowii. But luckily some croci recover and as it warms up they do show new flower buds.Crocus seem to be temperature and light controlled. Maybe unregular appearing is a kind of safety function to guarantee the survival of the specis? It makes sense for me.
Crocus biflorus tauriArnold
The best sieberi I have seen