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Quote from: Lesley Cox on August 25, 2010, 09:49:03 PMThat's quite disgusting Dave but I bet someone would pay a fortune for it. I have to agree with you Lesley --not the most attractive T. i've ever grown. Mark are you really lusting after it ? if that is the case then i'm open to all offers above a minimum of six figures of course--i'll start the ball rolling $000,001
That's quite disgusting Dave but I bet someone would pay a fortune for it.
You could probably stick with 1, Mark, your dollar being worth more than ours. But maybe Dave would like payment in GB pounds at present.
Gote I wonder if the possible mutation you mention has some connection to this 'sick albino budgie' that was growing in close proximity (within a metre),last year .Cheers Dave
A different colour on each stem from the one Trillium plant is something i've never come across before.............
Did my trillium seeds yesterday just would like to find out where I would keep these, are they better outside or in my polytunnel. If I looked back I probally would find the answer but away outside to do some seeds, so I am taking the lazy way.Like I have said before I am going to try and get better with seeds Angie
Quote from: angie on September 01, 2010, 03:32:14 PMDid my trillium seeds yesterday just would like to find out where I would keep these, are they better outside or in my polytunnel. If I looked back I probally would find the answer but away outside to do some seeds, so I am taking the lazy way.Like I have said before I am going to try and get better with seeds Angie Angie all my pots with trillium seed are put outside in the shade and will stay there,i check them every now and then to water to keep the compost moist,that's it but there are more experienced growers here who might do something different.
Quote from: daveyp1970 on September 11, 2010, 01:09:11 PMQuote from: angie on September 01, 2010, 03:32:14 PMDid my trillium seeds yesterday just would like to find out where I would keep these, are they better outside or in my polytunnel. If I looked back I probally would find the answer but away outside to do some seeds, so I am taking the lazy way.Like I have said before I am going to try and get better with seeds Angie Angie all my pots with trillium seed are put outside in the shade and will stay there,i check them every now and then to water to keep the compost moist,that's it but there are more experienced growers here who might do something different. Angie, your pots of Trillium seed are much better off outside meantime to take the weather. Once they germinate you could lift them into the tunnel if you wanted to give them a little protection.
And don't EVER let the pots get dry. I did. No Trillium seedlings - ever.
Yesterday I saw some small plants of T. rivale, pale pink but striped or slashed with uneven dashes of deeper red. Confidently, I said they were virused, but later wondered if this was correct. To my mind they were not attractive with the unever deeper colour but their owner said he had been selecting them over a few years as "something different." Does anyone have any thought please?
Quote from: Lesley Cox on September 12, 2010, 12:21:00 AMAnd don't EVER let the pots get dry. I did. No Trillium seedlings - ever. That's why I sow all my Trillium seed outdoors in the garden, in prepared beds... the au naturel way, where moisture levels are more consistent than when sown in pots. With our current drought, I do sometiems water the mulched seed beds. I have high hopes for the 2500 trillium seed I have sown this year; now if only I could keep the wild turkeys from trying to nest in the area and dig crater-like depressions For the time being, the situation is under control.